The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, November 17, 1903, Page 3

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1903. THE ONLY ONE There is only One Genuine-syl‘llp of F igs, The Genuine is Manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. The full name of the company, California Fig Syrup Co., is printed on the front of every package of the genuine. The Genuine~ Syrup of Figs- is for Sale, in Original Packages Only, by Reliable Druggists Everywhere Knowing the above will enable one to avoid the fraudulent imita- tions made by piratical concerns and sometimes offered by unreliable dealers. The imitations are known to act injuriously and should therefore be declined. Buy the genuine always if you wish to get its beneficia! effects. It cleanses the system gently yet effectually, dispels colds and headaches when bilious or constipated, prevents fevers and acts best on the kidneys, liver, stomach and bowels, when 2 laxative remedy is needed by men, women or children. Many millions know of its beneficial effects from actual use and of their own personal knowledge. It is the laxative remedy of the well-informed. Always buy the Genuine— Syrup of Figs MANUFACTURED BY THE (AIFORNIA JIGS Louiodlie, iy PRICE FIFTY CENTS PER BOTTIE - NOTED MEN IN THE HOUSE OF FIFTY-EIGHTH CONGRESS Some of the Old-Time Party Leaders Are Missed at the Ex- traordinary Session, but Among the New Members Are a Number Who Are Destined to Gain National Prominence —_— ALL BUREAU, 1406 G Street N. W., Washington, Nov. 16.—The 386 men who compose the House in the Fifty-eighth Con- gress, now in extraordinary session, af- ford an interesting study. Among them are many who return to Washington year after year and their services here have made their names household words throughout the land; but there are many new faces that have yet to _I make their impress upon the public. The old graybeards of legislation, like Payne and Cannon and Dalzell and Hep- burn and Grosvenor, and the oratorical wonders, like Cousins of Iowa and Clark of Missouri and Willlams of Mississippi and Littlefleld of Maine, are sure to Fattract the attention of the galleries, but before the session is closed from among | the members whose names are now mean- | ingless to the great mass of the Ameri- can public may come personalities whom fame will claim as her own. Certainly a cursory glance at the list of candidates who were successful in the Congressional | contests leads to the belief that the lower house has been enriched by no small num- ber of interesting and original figures. New York City contributes two new members, who for one reason or another will be observed with interest. Of these two “Big Tim' Sullivan—or, as he is on the books, “T. D. Sullivan’—should in | some respects be classed first. Sullivan | probably could not have come to Con- gress but from one of the great citles, and possibly New York is the only one of these in which he could hope to be | elected. From selling newspapers as a | boy he graduated into the saloon busi- | | ness, and then, having amassed no small amount of money, he chose to go to the State Senate for six or seven terms. “BIG TIM” A PATRIARCH. Of course, it was his famous East Side constituency that sent him there, as it | also sent him to Congress. He looks after the folks in his neighborhood as a father cares for his children—buys them food and fuel and clothes, pays the doctors’ and undertakers’ bills, loans and gives money and bails out or pays the fines of | those of his friends who happen to get | tangled up in the meshes of the law. It fs this .broad-minded, indiscriminate and unquestioning philanthropy the power of Sullivan is founded, and a very substantial foundation it is. Its consistent practice has made him a | Tammany Hall, and by many he is cred- ited with being the most influential of its members. At the age of 42 Sullivan, though himself a seller of liquors, never touches them himself; neither does he | tice Shiras of the United States Supreme upon which | power in that great political organization | DO YOU GET the Sixth Massachusetts District. Cap- tain Gardner comes of a rich and aristo- cratic family. He is a graduate of Har- vard, enjoys large wealth, and is a lover of athletics and sports in general. He made a brilliant record during the Porto Rican campaign in the Spanish war as & member of the staff of General ,James H. Wilson. He received one of the medals awarded for distinguished services in tl Porto Rican campaign. He has been a member of the Massachusetts Senate, and is 35 years old. Butler Ames, from the Lawrence district, a grandson of General B. F. Butler, is a graduate of West Point and a very promising young man. ‘W. 8. McNary, who succeeds Represent- ative Naphen in the Tenth Massachusetts District, is a well-known leader of the Boston Democracy. Frederick J. Landis, the successor of the veteran Representative Steele in the Eleventh Indiana District, is probably the youngest miember of the House, being but 27 years old. He is black | haired and black eyed and looks and dresses llke an actor. He was private secretary to his brother, Representative Charles B. Landis, in the Fifty-fifth Con- gress, but went home at the end of the session declaring that he would not re- turn to Washington save as a member of the House, and he has made good his boast. His brother having been re-elect- ed, the Landis boys from Indiana will cut quite a figure here winter after next. Of course, Judge Birdsall s pointed out as the man who stepped in and won out handsomely in Speaker Henderson's | district when that distinguished Iowan withdrew from the contest. He is a good lawyer and should make a good Congress- man. George Shiras comes here from Pitts- burg as'a Democrat. He is a son of Jus- Court and has been for a long time a fig- ure In politics in the Smoky City. D. L. D. Granger, the Democrat who | succeeded in breaking up the solid Con- gressional delegation of two from Rhode Island, is a_former Mayor of/Providence and a gold Democrat and protectionist. H. O. Young, Republican, of the Twelfth Michigan District, is a mine operator. A. | H. Jackson who defeated Representative | Norton, Democrat, in Ohio, was formerly a peddler and circus man. PULLED THE NOSE OF LENTZ. Judge Badger, Democrat, who suc-| £ . P | ceeds Representative Tompkins, 1s the | Pain or dull ache in the back is un- man who pulled_the nose df former Rep- | Mistakable evidence of kidney trouble. r;aen:lau\e Lentz, who once represented It is nature’s timely warning to show the district in Congress. Alva Adams, | | Eidanite Coad A At otianie Trom you that the track o_l health is not clear. | If these danger signals are unheeded | Colorado, was formerly Governor of that | more serious results are sure to follow; DR. KILMER'S SWAMP-ROOT. FLAMES AU HUNDRED YEARS A CHURCH ROOF OF GOOD WORK Disastrous Fire in Re-;StatesmenAttendAnni- ligious Edifice in versary of Historic San Diego. Church. B Diepatch to The Cill | WASHINGTON, Nov. 16. — The = W g crowning event in the centennial an- K . “ { niversary of the historic New York- . avenue Presbyterian Church in this city occurred to-night, when a public meeting was held which was attended by many of the best known officials in the city. They Roosevelt and Secretary Hay, storeroom at it and the be knowr - s church and there | Whom made addresses; Secretaries | b nd in the store. | Mo0dy, Shaw, Hitchcock and Cortel- you, Attorney General Knox, the included President | both of | nd dles are inclined and matches, the fire in any upward in a the top of the the large open of the audito- There the fire n and it could not t the roof two or three the entire 1 be rebullt. The was by water and —————— <tew~sv Discovery at Sitka. Nov. 16.—A special Sitka, v Skag- | rdue mer Dis- | at 11 o'clock this | experienced very | of gum were | American people this 15 each NEW ADVERTISEKEHTB. SOFT, GLOSSY HAIR. It Can Only Be Had Where There Is No Dandruff. Any man or woman who wants-soft, glossy r st be free of dandruf, which causes falling hair. Since it has become known that dandruff is a germ disease, the 0ld hair preparations, which were mostly scalp irritants, have been abandoned, and the public, barbers and | doctors included, have taken to using Newbro's Herpicide, tion_that kills the dandruff germ Dickinson, N. D., says: “Herpi- e not only cleanses the scalp from | ndruff and prevents the hair falling but promotes ja new growth. Herpi- »s my hair very gloss Sold cading druggists. Send 10c in stamps r sample to The Herpicide Co., Detroit, Dr. Lyon's PERFECT Tooth Powder Used by people of Tefinement for over a guarter of a century PREPARED BY the only hair prep- E. Moneyback means Schil- ling’s Best tes baling powder spices collee favoring extracts soda 2!l at your grocer's. If yor don't like them, he returns your money. greater number of the Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States and Senator Frye. Justice Harlan pre- sided. The President and Secretary Hay occupied the Lincoln pew and both had something to say of the mar- tyred President, Secretary Hay’s brief | being confined exclusively to President Roosevelt said, address that subject. in part: We can divide and myst divide on party lines as regards thé vital ques- tions. We cannot afford to divide, but | I have the right to challenge the best effort of every American worthy of the name to putting down by every means in his power corruption in private life, and, above all, corruption in public life. | And, remember you, the people of this | | government by the people, that while | the publ rvant, the Legislature, the executive officer, the Judge are not to | be excused if they fall short of their yet their doing their duty cannot avail unless you do yours. In the last | resort we have to depend upon the jury drawn from the people to convict the scoundrel who has tainted our public life, and unless that jury does its duty, unle it is backed by the sentiment of the people, all the work of legislators, executive officer, of judicial officer is for naught. “It would be trite to say anything about Lincoln and yet I am going to point to one thing: In reading his works and speeches, his addresses, one is struck by the fact that as he went higher and higher all personal bitter- ness seemed to die out of him. In the Lincoln-Douglass debates one can still catch now and then a note of personal antagonism; the man was in the arena and as the blows were given and taken you could see mow and then that he had a feeling against his antagonist. When he became President and faced the crisis that he had to face from that time on I do not think that you can find any expression, a speech of Lin- coin, @ word of Lincoln, written or spo- ken, in which bitterness is shown to any man. His devotion to the cause was so great that he neither could nor | would have feeling against any indi- vidual.” —_——— SON OF STATE’S FIRST GOVERNOR PASSES AWAY Dwight J. Burnett, a Pioneer of 1849, Is Called to Join the Majority. Dwight J. Burnett, a pioneer and son of the late Peter H. Burnett, the first Governor of California, died yesterday at his home in Visitacion Valley. 'Old age and general debility were too much for his feeble constitution to combat and he passed quietly away, surrounded by many of his relations. Burpett came to Oregon with his| father in 1843. Six years later he moved to California. at the time when the min- ing excitement was at its height and has resided in various localities in the State since then. He engaged in mining, agri- culture and mercantile business at dif- ferent times, but retired several years ago. He leaves a widow, four sons, George S., Frank W. Armstead D. and Peter H., and two daughters, Harriet M. Burnett and Mrs. Romie B. Hutchison. Attorney John M. Burnett, Mrs. Letitia M. Ryland and Mrs. W. T. Wallace, sisters of the deceased, also survive him. Deceased was a native of Tennessee and 74 years 5 months of age. a brother, and | | | | | | | No arrengements have yet been nudel gor the funeral. & | Herman Oelrichs and Mrs. W. K. Vander- | smoke. His only vice is gambling, and of | this he makes no concealment. bet on anything at any time—and almost invariably loses. He runs a theater and is the president of a beer pump company. In New York he can always be found at one of two places—at the Occidental Hotel on the Bowery, where he lives, despite | his income is something near 350,000 a | year, or holding up the iron railing in front of the Gilsey House. His nephew, “Little Tim"” Sullivan, is an Assemblyman, and the whole Sullivan family are in polities one way or another. The annual picnics, fathéred and paid for by “Blg Tim,’ are famous. Congressman is no orator, but he talks plainly and to the point. He tatks a sort of Bowery dialect, but not the kind you read in the New York papers. FROM THE SMART SET. F. B. Harrison, a Democrat hailing Zrom the Thirteenth New York District, is a son of Mrs. Burton Harrison, whose husband was the private Jefferson Davis. He comes from swell Fifth-avenue negihborhood, ke himself is quite a soclal leader. Minnesota will manage to keep herself well to the front by the changes and edditions she has made in her delega- tion. Perhaps the most interesting feat- ure of the election out that way was the return of ex-Governor John Lind to Congress, after an absence of some years. | His eourse will be watcied closely, be- | cause it has been predicted that, though 3. elected as a Democrat, he will take an Nelson’s home in Caldwell, N. J. Mrs. | 3. . - | independent attitude. This pr Nelson is 73 years of age. The shock of s peadjotian. is based upon the fact that his speeches her daughter's tragic death made her dan- | guring the campaign were rn(herpfa\'or- gerously 1], it is sald, and her physician | gple to President Roosevelt, and because was in constant attendance at all the sit- | in his time he has been Republican, Free tings of the commissioner. 4 Silver Republican, Popul'st and Demo- Mrs. Nelson testified that after her hus- | crat. His friends think it is about time band's death she was induced to go to| for him to start around the circle once San Francisco, where the agents of Mrs. | more. Mr. Lind is a self-made man and is a ready debater. He is a native of Sweden, but has been In this country REOPENG FIGHT FOR FAIR ESTATE Mrs. Nelson to File De-| position Alleging Fraud. NEW YORK, Nov. 16.—Fraud and mis- representation on the part of the agents | of the Vanderbilt and Oelrich interests | in the estate of the late Charles Falr, are charge by Mrs. Hannah F. Nelson, | mother of the late Mrs. Fair, in a deposi- | tion to be filed to-morrow in the Supreme | Court by Bela D. Eisler, special commis- | sioner appointed by Justice Barrett to | take testimony of witnesses connected in | any way with the automobile accident by | which Mr. and Mrs. Fair lost their lives near Paris. Commissioner Eisler will sail to-morrow on the Kaiser Wilhelm II for | Paris to take the testimony of ten wit- nesses. Court has been held by Eisler In Mrs. the and bilt Jr. induced her to relinquish her | claim to the $5,000,000 estate by alleging since childhood. It is thought that he has fraudulently that they had cablegrams | his eye on the United States Senate as showing that Mrs. Fair died instantly and | the successor of Knute Nelson, with her husband survived her, which, if true, ( whom he has been at strife for a long would destroy Mrs. Nelson's right to the | time. Lind succeeds in Congress Loren estate. As a result, she accepted $125,000 | Fletcher, a well-known Republiean mem- to sign over agreements relinquishing her | ber, who was renominated, but falled of rights, she says. election, Two of the Paris witnesses to be ex»1 The prophets see in J. Adam Bede, of amined are physicians—Albert Perriquet | the Duluth district, the wit of the present i and Henri Chateau. The others are M. | House. Bede's career, like Lind's, is a | Martingay, Emile Menard, Jules Taupin, | varied one, especially its political end. Fernand Boison, Martinal Hourde, Pau- Beginning as a Prohibitionist, it did not line Hourde, Eugene Bensire and H. de Bornoil. On the steamer with Commissioner Eis- | ler will sail F. B. Candler, attorney for Mrs. Oelrichs and Mrs. Vanderbilt, nndI H. M. T. Beekman, counsel for Mrs, | Nelson. ———— AGED MAN IS DROWNED IN SIX INCHES OF WATER Pioneer of the Fall River Country Loses Life in a Shallow Stream. REDDING, Nov. 16.—An old man named William Ross was drowned in a small stream near the Fall River Mills Electric Light Works to-day. Ross had | fallen into the stream and was drowned in six inches of water. Foul play was at first suspected, but at the investiga. tion accidental death was clearly proved. Ross’ body was found by Died. rick Knock. The stream ran through Knock's fleld. Beveral witnesses were examined and all testified that in their opinion Ross met his death accidentally. It was deemed inadvisable to call the Coroner. The unfortunate old man was a plo- neer of the Fall River country and at one time had large bands of cattle on | the ranges. He lost all in a heavy snow storm. He had no known relatives in this country and was buried by the people in the community. | take him long to throw a handspring into the Democratic ranks, and from there the Republican party was reached by easy stages. President Cleveland appointed im as the compromise candidate for United States Marshal of Minnesota. CAN'T HELP BEING FUNNY. He wrote his acceptance o the ap- pointment on a piece of birch bark, and from that time out has been known as | “Birch Bark” Bede. Bede comes to Con- gress under Republican auspices. He is a newspaper man, formerly wrote edito- rial paragraphs for a Washington paper, and is now running a weekly the sub- scription price of which is but 25 cents a year, but which is taken by practically all the politiclans in the Northwest. In 1890 he made a speech in a political con- vention that stamped him as a humorist. His friends say that he just can’t help being funny, and that he will make a bigger hit than did “Private” John Allen, of Mississippl, whose retirement to the shades of Tuepole robbed Congress of its leading performer in this Iine. Halver Steenerson, of the Ninth Min- nesota District, will be pointed out as the man who once seconded the nomina- tion of James G. Blalne in a national convention. He is a lawyer, more than six feet tall and of striking appearance. The retirement of Kahn and Loud is much regretted here. Mr. Kahn won a high place of influence in the House, while Mr. Loud’s service as the head of the Postoffice Committee for many years has been of the most valuable and im- portant character. s Chairman “Dave”” Mercer of the Public Buildings and Grounds Committee went down to defeat in Nebraska before Wil- liam J. Bryan's close political and person- man 7:05 and 8:05 a. m. and Berkeley 7:08 | &l friend, Gilbert M. Hitchcock, editor of and §:08 a. m.; returning, leave San Fran- | the Omaha World-Herald. Mr. Bryan and | eleco 5:30 and 6:00 p. m. * | Mr. Hitchcock 'ese editorially associated g his r, and the Men love neither wise women nor wits. | Was the. Democratic Presldential candi, No man is as quick witted as is a Wo- | gate’s personal representative at the Kan. man when hér pride is stung. sas City convention. Hitchcock is about 1 Berkeley Flyers Of the Southern Pactfic now run in both dai- rections daily, except Sunday, leaving Berry- 5 o 40 years old. Alfred Lucking of Detroit will be an- other character. Lucking’s victim was Representative Corliss, whose advocacy of a Pacific cable brought down upon him the influence of such forces as made his re-election impossible. Lucking is a law- yer and a partner of the present Mayor of Detroit. He is a man of ability. He has never taken before more than a local or State interest in active politics, but is a straightout Democrat. Senator Lodge's son-in-law, Captain A. — L P, Gardner, comes to Washington from THANKSGIVING OF THE PLUMBER AND THE BURGLAR. BY OCTAVE THANET. Strangest Story You Ever Heard of in the NEXT SUNDAY CALL. o He will | The new | secretary of | of the House, and at the expiration | |of his term in the Fifty-eighth Con- | gress will have seen twenty-six vears of | continuous service there. Two or three other members of the House have besn members longer than General Bingham, but their service has not been continuous. General Ketcham of New York was first elected to Congress forty vears ago and at the expiration of his term in the Fifty-eighth Congress will have served thirty-two vears In the House. Speaker Cannon has been a member twenty-eight years, but his service has not been con- | tinuous, as he was defeated for re-election to the Fifty-second Congress in 15%0. SOME OF THE OLD-TIMERS. Dalzell of Pennsylvania has been a member for sixteen years. General Gros- venor of Ohio came into the House two years before Dalzell. They are the right- | hand men of the Speaker. Hitt of Illinois has served for twenty- two years, while Hepburn of Iowa has a record of sixteen years’ membership. Hep- burn first came in as a member of the Forty-seventh Congress, but from the | Fiftieth to the Fifty-second Congresses, both inclusive, he was out of publie life, returning, however, in the Fifty-third Congress. Two members of the present House of long service who retired from mem- bership last March are Grow of Penn- sylvania and Hopkins of Illinois, the latter of whom was transferred to the Senate. Grow, who retired volun- tarily from public life, was first elected to Congress fifty-two years ago and ten vears later was Speaker of the House. He has served altogether twenty-two years, having re-entered the House in the Fifty-third Congress after an absence of thirty years. ber for elghteen years, two years than Speaker Henderson's service. ———————— INDIAN YOUNGSTERS BOUND FOR RIVERSIDE Leave Hoopa Valley Reservation to Enter School in Southern California. Frank Kyselka, superintendent of the Hoopa Valley Indian reservation, and F. J. Gehringe, an instructor of the same institution, arrived from the north yesterday morning with fourteen | Indian children destined for the River- side school. The youngsters are a bright lot and availed themselves of | the better part of the day in seeing the sights of the big city. They were awed by the tall buildings and greatly amused by the mysterious movement of | the cable cars up and down Masfket street and finally were permitted to en- Jjoy the novel experience of shooting up to the top of a skyscraper in an eleva- tor. Late in the afternoon Superintendent Kyselka and his wife, aided by In- structor Gehringe, got their youthful charges bunched in front of the Grand i Hotel and a few minutes later the In- dians were hurriedly hiking up Market | street toward Third, where it was in- | tended that they should board a car bound for the depot at Third and Townsend streets, where they were to have taken a train for the south. Mar- ket street was crowded at that hour by pedestrians on their way home from work, and before Kyselka realized it his wards had become mixed up in the mass of moving humanity and were out of sight. On reaching Third street seven of his wards were missing. As but a few less State. Frank B. Brandegee of the| Third Connecticut District is one of the | Bright's disease, which is the worst osf ta B | Republican National Committee. | Ollle James of Kentucky, Democrat, | | 1s a physical glant with a baby face and | | altogether a picturesque figure. J. A. | Sullivan, who had the distinction of de- feating Eugene N. Foss, brother of the | chatrman of the House Naval Affairs Committee, In a Republican district in | ‘Mas-achuneus is a popular Democrat | | who has long figured in politics and won a reputatiofi as a vote getter. With these may be classed Representative | | “Billy” Lorimer, former streetcar driver { and present Republican boss of Chicago, | | who returns to the House after a term | | spent out of Congress, In which he won | | celebrity as the successful manager of Representative Hopkins' Senatorial fight. Nearly all the old leaders of the House have been returned to the Fifty- eighth Congress. 'All the chairmen of| important committees in the present | House were re-elected with the ex-| ception of Loud of California, chair- man of the Postoffice Committee, and | | Mercer of Nebraska, at the head of the | Gommittee on Public Buildings and | Grounds. A large proportion of the old | members have seen exceptionally long | service in the House. General Harr:, Bingham of Pennsylvania is the “father” | you. The mild and the extraordinary effect { of the world-famous kidney and bladder remedy, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, is | soon realized. It stands the highest for its wonderful cures of the most distress- ing cases. A trial will convince any one—and you may have a sample bottle free; by mail. I was a constant sufferer for a num- ber of years with back ache, rheuma- | tism and frequent desire to urinate, but after using Dr. Kilmer's Swamp- Root, I am entirely cured and choer- fully recommend this wonderful rem- edy to any who may suffer from these common complaints. Most truly yours, 'W. C. Baily, 24 Lieut. of Police, Columbus, Ga. Lame back is only one symptom of kidney trouble—one of many. Other symptoms showing that yvou need Swamp-Root are, being obliged to pass water often during the day and to get up many times during the night, inabil- ity to hold your urine, smarting or irri- up WITH A LAME BACK? Have You Rheumatism, Kidney, Liver or Bladder Trouble P To Prove What SWAMP-ROOT the Great Kidney, Liver and Bladder Remedy, Will Do for YOU, All Our Readers May Have a Sample Bottle Sent Free by Mail. | ambition, loss of flesh. sallow plexion. Ii your water when allowed to remain undisturbed in a glass or bottle for twenty-four hours forms a sediment or settling, or has a cloudy appearance. is evidence that your kidneys and bla der need immediate attention. In tiking Swamp-Root you_ affor i natural help to Nature, for Swamn Root is the most perfect healer gand gentle aid to the kidneys that is known | to medical science. Swamp-Root is the great discovery of Dr. Kilmer, the eminent kidney and bladder specialist. Hospitals use | with wonderful success in both slight and severe cases. Doctors recommend it to their patients and use it in their | own families, because they recognize in Swamp-Root the greatest and most suc | cessful remedy for any derangement oi the kidney, liver and bladder. Ycu may have a sample bottle of this wonderful remedy, Swamp-Root. sent absolutely free by mail, also a book rellmg all about Swamp-Root and con- taining many of the thousands upon thousands of testimonial letters receiv ed from men and women cured. In writing to Dr. Kilmer & Co.. Bingham ton, N. Y., be sure to say that vou read this generous offer in The San Fran- cisco Daily Call. If you are already convinced that Swamp-Reot is what you need. vou can com- | that hostelry before many hours had Hopkins has been a mem. - purchase the regular fifty-cent and one- dollar size bottles at drug stores every- where. Don’t make any mistake. but remember the name, Swamp-Root. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root. and the address, Binghamtor [.. on every bottle tation in passmg. brick-dust or sedi- ment in the urine, catarrh of the blad- der, uric acid, constant headache, dizzi- ness, sleeplessness, nervousness, irregu- lar heart-beating, rheumatism, bloating, lack of minutes remained in which to catch|from Agnes Ethel Clark for desertion, the traia he bundled the remaining In- | Alexander Rice from Margaret Rice for dians aboard a car and, after seeing | infidelity, Penelope Harper from Frank them safely on the train and in the | S. Harper for neglect, Carrie Meinen custody of Gehringe, he returned to the | from Anton Meinen for desertion and Palace. He was sure that his missing | John J. Leek from Frances Leek for youngsters had taken their bearings | desertion. during the day and would return to | Suits for divorce were filed by Alice Kelleher against Thomas J. Kelleher for desertion, E. M. Ivy against Frank M. Tvy for neglect, Jennie J. Spur- | rier against W. W. Spurrier for cruel- ty, Louise Goodrich against Herschel Goodrich for desertion, Henriette Hess against Leopold Hess for desertion and Orlando Macey against Sarah A. Macey for desertion. —_——————— - It's a foolish woman who makes an- other woman her confessor. passéd and his confidence was not mis- placed, for about 7 o'clock the Indians began to put in an appearance, and were finally counted, fed and put to | bed. To-day they will follow the bal- ance of the band to Riverside. —_—————— In the Divorce Court. Interlocutory decrees of divorce were granted yesterday to Fred W. Clark ADVERYISEMENTS. ! ’ sl “] Feel Great!” How often that is said by men who have been cured of nervous debil- ity by the Dr. McLaughlin Electric Belt! They say it every day. Men who have been weak, gloomy, irresolute and who had no confidence In themselves at all are now holding up their heads in pride. with the knowl- edge that perfect strength is restored: that they are as good as any man that walks, 2and better than any man of their size. You know you are weak now, and wish you could say that you wer: good as any man of your -ixe. ‘You can if you will use this grand invigorator. DR. McLAUGHLIN’S ELECTRIC BELT. DR McLAUGHLIN_Dear Sir: In regard {o the beit T parchased of you T will eay it is the only cure I have ever found. 1 have gained 15 pounds since I began your treatment, and feel like another man. I can work and have the emergy to do my werk. Yours very truly, C. H. DREWRY, Korbel, Cal. They come every day from everywhere. There is not a town or hnmlet in the country which has not cures by Dr. Hchn'hlln s Electric Bel Now what does this mean to you, dear reader? If you are not 'h-ll you ought to be, can you ask any better proof to make you try it? Is thede a remedy which is as simple, as easy to use, as sure to cure, and as cheap as Dr. McLaughlin's Electric Belt? I have not seen one. You must try it. In justice to yourself and to those who look to you for their future hap- |neu, try it now. Act this minute. Such a matter ought not to be de- ‘Worn while you sleep, it causes no trouble. You feel the gentle. glowing heat from it constantly, but no sting. no burning. as in old style belts. Call to-day, or send for my beautiful book, full of the things a man ]lke-mt;) red-d if he wants to be a strong man. I send it sealed free. Cut out this a Dr. M. o‘C“:. McLavghli l!m’-—ln.u.nls‘ It‘s as good for women as for men. 906 MARKET STREET, SAN FRANCISCO. Sundays, 10 to L

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