The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, December 16, 1903, Page 6

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THE SAN FRA NCISCO CALL, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1903. KNOX ASSAILS [RUNCIE MAKES |TRACES FEVER [FIXING CRIME [CIVES NOTICE RAILWAY POOL Blunt Denunciation of Methods of Morgan, Hill) and Their Merger Colleagues | CREATION OF FIAT STOCK| Attorney General Says Publie Is Asked to Pay Dividends Seeurities Upon “Watered™ Dec. 15.—Attorney j umed his argument Securities case in the Court to-day. union of the and Great Northern two competing oads had been brought rs that their independ= titive factors in inter- was destroyed. The at had been done was declared en brought about by 1in the joint traf- These ts or agreements WASHINGTON General Knox 1 upreme the anies cases. competing regulation of | » independent and oad for the The thes lines of railr Government argeements re- and the traffi charges th charged strained commerce, rt sustained that conten- DEFEATS POLICY OF THE LAW. discussed the end accom- railroad x th pli y the of the ing esorted to in this case, defeats the policy of the mplished all and more of effectual destruction of than was accomplished in and joint traffic 1l it a_merger, a | merger may « 1 1 pool, a conspiracy, a nso. a contract, a securities my you like. The thing postoed is not varied by a var- r manner of bringing lared that Morgan and Hill suppress competition Knox de the power to between these two roads when they 1 of the majority of the He asserted that they power and actually sup- »ved competition be- moment they parted lega to their segregated and vested them in the North- rities Company. AL itle KINGS. { d, ““to bring | vad facilities of an im- of the country under ic control, but when to the fix charges for transportation add the creation of scores of mil- fiat k upon which those harges are exy a to pay Qividends e an unjustifiable burden up- exact too hjgh a pried evasion of the law. ' be true that the re-| of these companies was existing market values for existing market values time upon total forgetful- e fact that the progress of perity is not ccntinuous | values were lifted upon yptimism that had con- ck and stock values all in sight, as wel! as all | future | SOORES FINANC section railr vet ctations of ma was done when men who regarded as wise men and en lost their hold upon their ent and failed to withstand the t to gather for their instant | age the fruits which, | would have lasted many d been furnished many people. | question this case is not r Congress can regulate and has regulated State corporations or the rehip of their capital stock. The ion Can the owners of such capitz] stock regulate interstate com- | merce?” served is YOUNG DEFENDS THE .\lEKGEl{.; rge B. Young followed on behalf of the securities company. Young con- | tended that the transfer of the stock of the railroad companies to the secu- rities company had been entirely free | from the features which had operated | to throw discredit upon the formation | trusts. The transaction was noth- | ing more than a transfer of property. We are proceeding upon the theory,” | he that an out and out sale was | made, and unless the court is prepared | to hold that Congress should exercise | exclusive control of all portation terstate commerce we fail to see how | this transaction can-be held to become | a combination in restraint of trade or | agairst the a trust law.” said, 15.—The cl charter cgn- | d to-daj Rev. Charles H. [ Democrat, was elected president. | lays are allowed by law for preparation | harter for submission to the voters. ADVERTISEMENTS. Always the Same Good 0/d Bictz | Runcie was the first witness. | concerning the article reflecting uvon | R. |ery and also the date on which Gen- | | faith | the railroad track to Chattaroy, seven | on the work. | ers of.the story, women seeking shel- | Tuesday if you really cannot comme on ! ter dn the home will be, permitied to ] Monday, #s usual; N0 RETRACTION —————— eral Wood Instigated At- tacks Upon General Brooke e FRYE USES PLAIN WORDS, Pa s Former American Official in Cuba Declares the Military | Governor Was Untruthful sl WASHINGTON, Dec. 15.—In the General Wood case to-day Major J. E. | State- | ments made by Ray Stannard Baker, | the | Brooke made it necessary for the re- call of Major Runcie. He was asked a | number of questions concerning the administration of Major General | !origin of the article in question and | stood by his former testimany, to the | eect that General Wood had knowl- edge of the story and that it was pre- pared practically at his suggestion and dictation. The next witness was General George | Burton, inspector general of the | army. He occupied the position of in- spector general in Cuba under the ad-'| ministration of General Wood as Gov- | ernor Generel, and it was he who dis- covered the postal frauds. He -was| called to give the date of that discov- eral Wood made the order revising tne Jjudicial system of Cuba for the admis- sion of ex parte testimony. General Burton said that the discovery of the postal frauds was made in April, 1900, | and that it was two weeks or more | later when the order was issued by General Wood changing the jurisdic- | tion and powers of the court. Alexis E. Frye, formerly Superin- tendent of Public Instruction in Cuba, | told the committee that the schools of | Cuba were organized under laws issued | by General Brooke and that an order making & cut in salaries of teachers | was issued by General Wood. He deé- | clared that there had been a breaci of on the part of General Wood | when he interfered with the efficiency of the schools. He asserted that Gen- | eral Wood was untruthful in many | matters affecting public affairs. Secretary Root will be called by the Committee on Military Affairs to-mor- row, when the committee plans to con- clude its inquiry. PRRBRRER) i @ LOCK CAPTIVE N 4 BOX CAR Masked Burglars Make Busi- ness Man a Prisoner at| His Store in Washington —e SPOKANE, Wash., Dec. 15.—A search for Postmaster J. F. Congleton, kid- | naped by masked thugs, aroused the, people of Milan, Wasn., last night. About 9:30 p. m. Congleton went to hl!! store and discovered two burglars in possession. He tried to escape, but be- ing a cripple was overtaken and made prisoner. The robbers marched Congleton down miles away, where he was compell® to climb into a boxcar and was locked in. About midnight Mrs. Congleton | awoke and missed her husband and gave the alarm. The town turned out to search for him. The tracks were found and traced to Chattaroy, where he was found in the boxcar unharmed. — HOME TO BE ESTABLISHED i TO GIVE SHELTER TO WOMEN | Friends of the Late Mrs. Harriet Hub- bard Ayer Decide to Erect a Memorial Building. NEW YORK, Dec. 15.—In memory of Mrs. Harriet Hubbard Ayer, the writer, who died recently, a home shortly will be established in this city for the purpose of affording friendless women a night’s shelter. Friends of Mrs. Ayver have organized for the purpose. of building the home the Sevén Poor Travelers’ Association, so named from a tale by Dickens. Twenty-five charter members, all of whom were Mrs. Ayer’s close personal g transfers of | friends, or those interested in her life | sorry, Mis' Blank, gencies engaged in in- | and work, signed the incorporation cayn't do out vo' wash till Chewsday papers. Several 1hn|§aand§ ofi dollarsl already have been promised to carryl Like the seven travel- remain only fof one night. —_———————— A Washington Medal. John Dillon, a banker at Geary, owns a medal alleged to be one of the eight given by George Washington to eight Arapahoe Indian chiefs in 1789. The medal is nearly two ard a half inches in diameter and made of unalloyed silver. It was given to Dilion by an Arapahoe chief, Jock Bull Bear, who declared that it was given originally. to 'his grandfather, White Owl, by ‘Washington and transmitted by White Owl to his son of the same name, who was the uncle of Jock Bull Bear and from whom Bull Bear received it. On one side is the head of Washing- ton, encircled by the words, “George ‘Washington, the Father of His Coun- try.” Below is the date, “1789.” On the other side are two olive branches inclosing two clasped hands with the date, 1789, and two crossed pipes be- neath. In the outer margin at the top is the word “Friendship” with six stars on each separating it from the words, “The Pipe of Peace,” in the outer mar- gin at the bottom of the medal. " The thirteenth star is immediately beneath tie word “Friendship.” “f The story of the medal as told to Mr, Dillon is that the Arapahoe tribe was in camp at Colorado Springs in 1788 when eight chiefs left on horseback for Washington. They made the trip suceessfully and returned in njnc menthe from the dgy of departure, Mr. Dillon does not know the value of the medal. but has refused all offers for ! its purchase.—Kansas City Journai. | Shakespeare as a commercial GERNS ORIGIN the | Reitérates Charge That Gen-!Dr. F. B. Mallory Explains His Discovery to the Boston Society of Medical Seiences —_— MOSQUITO SPREADS DISEASE i B Miero-Organisms Attain Their Full Development in the Stomach of the Insect Pest SR W BOSTON, Dec. 15.—At a meeting of the Boston Society of Medical Science to-night Dr. F. B. Mallory, associate professor of pathology in the Harvard Medical School, explained in detail his discovery of the scarlet fever germ. He said that in the skin of four ‘vic- tims of the disease who died in the eruptive stage he found a series of bodies which closely resembled the va- rious development stages of a proto- zoan. In the course of his paper Dr. Mallory said: “While many of the common infec- | tious diseases are due to bacteria, the | lowest form of vegetable life, a certain number are due to protozoa, the lowest form of animal life. Of the latter dis- eases the best known and the most studied are the malarial fevers, of which three distinct varleties are rec- ognized. In these malarial diseases the protozoa, or hemosphoridias, live and develop in the blood. Here they pass through, however, only a sexual development. If these micro-organisms {in the human blood are sucked up‘t by a certain group of mosquitoes they then pass through, in the stomach of the mosquito, their sexual develop- ment and are ready after a certain length of time to infect other persons when transferred to their blood by the bite of the infected mosquito. “The bodies found in scarlet fever re- semble the different stages of the sex- ual development of the malarial organ- ism, but do not live in the blood. In- stead they live in the epithelial cells of the skin and tongue, betwcen these cells and in the superficial lymph ves- sels and spaces of the corium. Like the malarial parasites they multiply by forming segmenting bodies, or ro- settes. These rosettes are about one- third larger than the malarial rosettes and the number of segments would seem to be about twice as many. Whether sexual development occurs as with malarial micro-organism could not be determined.” The importance of finding these bodies in scarlet fever, Dr. Mallory said, lay in the fact that up to the present time absolutely nothing has been known id regard to the cause of the disease. ——— Aged Negress' Long Walk. SYRACUSE, N. Y., Dec. I:L——Ca!'fi': line E. Hixson, a negress, bent and wrinkled with age, has arrived here, having walked, she says, from Geor- gia to seek relatives, from whom she was separated fifty-six years ago. The old woman told the police where her I get out of here,” deciared the 6-foot | parents had lived, but no trace of them could be found and it is sup- posed they died years ago. Two other persons were located who remembered her, however, and they confirmed the story she told of having been carried away in childhood with several run- away slaves. —_————— Disappointment of Tourists. Hero worshipers must cultivate an easy credulity when they go on pil- grimage. If they do not they are al- most sure to suffer disenchantment when they reach the longed for shrine. The Florence of Dante is being given over to the builder of villas, cheap and nasty; Stratford-on-Avon regards asset, The famous Dbirthplace would not be recognized by the poet if he were to set erves on it to-day, and as for the treasures of the museum, they are for the most part a collection of antiquated rubbish. J. Cuming Walters, well known as an authority on Tennyson, has dared to question the worth of these venerated relics, and Sydney Lee, the Shakespearean scholar, who is also | one of the trustees, has ccnsented to make an inquiry into the authenticity of each individual article. Halliwell Phelps said that the only remaining part of the original Shakespeare house was the cellar. What will remairt of the museum when its contents have been made the subject of a searching inquiry ?—Rochester Post-Express. ¥ —_————— Aunt Dinah’s Silver Wedding. Old Dinah Jackson, the cbony-hued cook of the Blank family, came to hér employer one day and said, “I is very very softy, but I next week. T hope hit'll be alf to you.” "I suppose the same Tl “have to-wait_ until but it will-be rather inconvenient for me to put.off my washing “fo oblige you.- “Why cannot you come on Monday?” ° “Well, to tell de truf, I wants ter cel- erbrate my silvah weddin‘ Monday, an’ 1 shall be needed ter home ter git ready fo' my comp'ny.” “Your silver wedding? Why, Dinah, T had no idea that you and Mr. Jack- son had been married twenty-five years.” ’ “Oh, we aint, to tell de ackshul truf, but, you see, I bé'n mahied ’leven yeahs ter Mistah Jackson, an’ I was mahied to’teen yeahs ter my fust hus- band, an’ hit so happens dat Mistah Jackson was mahied fo'teen veahs ter his fust wife, an’ an’ ’leven and fo'teen make twenty-five, so hit seems fa'r ‘nough fo' us ter celebrate our silvah weddin’, don’t hit?"—Woman's Home Companion. —————————— Guillotine in Sweden. ‘Who would have supposed during the Reign of Terror that a day would come when the guillotine would be used for a laudable purpose? Yet this has just | Pers and: happened in Sweden, for a guillotine has been erected in the market place at Gothenburg, where it is used daily, for the purpose of decapitating chick- ens, ducks and other domestic animals.’ The local Society for the Prevention of {. Al Cruelty to Animals is responsible for|gaye this novel step. | ON GRAVELLE Prosecution Introduces Damag- ing Testimony in the North- ern Pacific Dynamite Case —_— R PRISONER IS IDENTIFIED A S :‘Two of the Threatening Let- ters Are in Handwriting of Former Cellmate of Accused | e HELENA, Mont., Dec. 15.—The tak- Eing of testimony in the case of Isaac : Gravelle, charged with sending letters ,to the Northern Pacific officials de- | manding money for immunity from dy- | tentiary Conley, who testified to Gra- | velle having served two terms in the penitenti cution is that three of the threatening were written in the penitentiary by the cellmate of Gravelle, a man named Harvey Whitton, who is serving an | eighty-year sentence for murder. Con- culiar water mark. of directors of the road and was dated July 16, 1903, the day Gravelle was re- leased from prison. It was the first letter, making a demand for $25,000, The second was without date and di- | rected the raflroad company how to | deliver the money and what the denom- | inations were to be. There are eighty witnesses in at- tendance on the trial and it will sume about two weeks. | @ dmtrimiiefriefeieieiferiieiiieieiie @ GIRL ACCLSE OF KIDNAPING She Eloped | With a South Dakota Youth Only Seventeen Years of Age S SIOUX CITY, Iowa, Dec. 15.—On a | telephone message from the youth's | father, Albert Dineen of Yankton, S. | D., aged 17, and Jessie Lane, aged 18, of | Homer, Nebr., were taken from a train | when they reached Sioux City to-day {and put into jail. | Dineen, being under age, was locked in a cell and a charge of kidnaping was filed against the girl. | “What do you think of me kidnap- !ing you, Bert?’ asked pefite Jessie. | “I think Il thrash the old man whaen youth, who has a record of having al- irendy trounded the ‘%i¢ man” onee. i Later, being informed over-the tele- phone that the two were determined ‘lo wed, the boy’s father relented. | “Let them go,” he said, and they { hurried away to Jessic's home to be married. —_————————— KT!:TS'I"I.\'(; STRENGTH OF | AMERICAN TIMBERS 1 At Washington, Yale and Elsewhere i Under Direction of Burean | of Forestry. | Timber tests which shall determine the strength of the principal American | timbers used for construction purposes lare now in progress at Washington, | D. C.; at Yale University, New Haven, ,Conn.; at Purdue University, Lafay- ette, Ind., and at the University of | California, Berkeley, Cal. These tests jare made under the direction of the | Bureau of Forestry, and are for the benefit of lumbermen, construction en- gineers and scientific men who are in- | terested in the strength of different wood fibers. plans from the results of its tests to make tables of the strength of differ- i ent American woods to which the engi- neer may refer when he wishes to know | what timbers to use for certain pur- | poses, The tests will be in cross bend- | ing and breaking, compression with and against the grain and shearing. No complete and satisfactory series | pt tests on large sticks of timber has ever been made in this c8untry. Lum- ber manufacturers in”the South and the Pacific Coast States are especially interested in this work, since they wish to know more “about their produef. | They have contributed gratis much of | the materia! used in thé tests. The chief timbers now being tested are the Southern pines and the red’fir of the Pacific Coast. at Washington tests are now in pro- grees on loblolly pine sticks 17 feet long {and 8 by 14,:8-by § and 8 by 4 inches. Special ‘attention i8 given to the effects of mbisture on thestrength of wood. grown rapidly the.strength. was found to decrease 50 to 60 per cent after the dry wcod had been soaked several days in water. The fact, however. is mot vet established and wiil have to be | proved by further experiments. The timbers tested are-of the usual grades | purchased in the market and .are. not selécted pieces. kS e ‘At the laboratory of tHe Yale Fprest School ‘jn New Haven small selected pleces of longleaf pine, without knots or other defects, are being tested so as to learn what is.the ultimate strength of the, fibers. - 7 . At Berkeley. Cal., tests'are ' being made on red fir-from-timbers contrib- uted by red fir manufacturers. - Dr. Wi-K. Hatt, who is stationed at Purdue Univefsity, is carrying on a se- ries of tests there with-hardwood tim- reparing for ‘publication the results' of all’ the tests of the bu- j reaun.—Bureau,of ‘Forestry Bulletin. P S A flock of ostriches at Phoenix, Ariz., | ccording 1o @ recent census there Npwalrd ot 800 ChifieNd in. Tohan Animals, it claims, | nesburg, of whom 180 are in ‘business. may be legitimately used as food, but| A1l are reported to do well. there is no reason why they should suf- fer while dying, and the surest way P b oA % According to the Massachusetts Bu- to avoid such suffering is to employ a |reau of Statistics, there are 3459 law- guillotine as an instrument of death.— vers in that State, 5497 physicians and Golden Penny. E surgeons and 3737 clergymen. namite outrages, began to-day. Among | the witnesses was Warden of the Peni- | the first reduction since the great strike The theory of the prose- | con- | i 1 | ley identified two of the lhl_‘eatenihgimany sales have been reported below letters as being in the handwriting of | that figure. Whitton. The paper they were written : announcement of a reduction in wages on is sent out by a school of corre- | spondence and was identified by a pe- | One of the letters | gnq alljed | identified was addressed to the board | | The new rate is somewhat above the | letters received by the railroad officials | basis of the former $2 coke scale and "lndlca!es that the Frick company in- OF REDCTION| The H. C. Frick Coke Company Makes Big Cut in Wages of Men in Connellsville Region B PLANTS AFFECTED e oo o Simultaneously With the An- nouncement Supply Stores Lower Prices on Their Goods MANY CONNELLSVILLE, Pa., Dec. 16.—A reduction in wages averaging 17 per cent, and affecting 30,000 men in the Connellsville - coke regions, was an- nounced to-day. The H. C. Frick Coke Company takes- the initiative in this, of the early nineties, and to-day post- ed notices at all of its plants announc- ing the reductions. | tends to make a stand for something like a $2 minimum price for furnace coke,, notwithstanding the fact that Simultaneously with the the Union Supply Company, the owner of all the company stores at the Frick companies, announced a general cut in the price of goods. L e R ) DIETRICH CASE 10 BE RUSHED Government Progoses to Try Indietments Growing Out of REGAL SHOES. The bare ‘facts about Regal Shoes are what we want you to know. The trouble is that the facts are so remarkable you find them hard to believe. It does seem strange that nobody else can make -and sell shoes equal to Regals at $3.50. Strange because Regal methods are as open as daylight. Any shoe manufacturer could do as well for you if he followed the Regal system. The secret of Regal success is really no secret at all. It is simply the elimination of all superfiu- ous handlings and profits. We are tanners. We are manufacturers. We are retailers. We sell our product direct to the wearer. One sale —one profit. The ordinary method is this: The tanner must have a profit on the hides he sells through a commission broker, who must also-have a profit. He sells to the manufacturer, who sells to the jobber, who sells to the retailer, who adds thirty or forty per cent. profit to the four profits already added, and by the time you get the The Burcau of Forestry | In the laboratories ! In the case of lobloHy .pine which has | Nebraska Postoffice Scandal oot A, OMAHA, Dec. 15.—Special Agent Gregory of the Department of Justice arrived in the city to-day and testified before the Grand Jury which is investi- gating the Hastings postoffice removal case. Gregory, it is said, brought dccu- mentary evidence supplied by the Washington authorities in connection with the case. Judge Munger to-day made an order for the drawing of a special Grand | Jury to investigate the cases now be- | fore the court, the jurors to report on | December 28. At the office of District Attorney Summers it was stated that | extraordinary effort would be made to | prepare the Government's case against | Senator Dietrich and others indicted in | the postoffice case as speedily as pos- | sible, in order that the prosecution may | be ready for trial when court convenes | on December. 28. State Representative Frank Currie, indicted last week for alleged illegal fencing, appeared in court to-day and i gave $1000 bonds. W. G. Comstock, vice | president of the Nebraska Feeding | Company, also indicted for similar of- fenses, came to the city to-day. SIS ARSI TR G LA The Language. The English language is no station- | ary affair, fixed and limited in its scope, { but'few appreciate how fast it is grow- ing. A new dictiopary, just issued, shows this—in fact, every new diction- | ary of importance that pretends to give | the words in the language in complete- ness does the same. The particular dictionary referred to gives no less than 17,000 new terms or new meanings of | {old words. A large number of new| terms in the language always come from scientific vocabularies. There is also a considerable addition through | the adoption or modification of foreign | words. As maps are expanded, changed | or filled up through the labors of geo. graphical explorers, so the investiga- tions of the savants in astronomy, | | chemistry, electricity and other of the physical sciences, as well as in psychol- | ogy, economics and philosophy, index | widened mental horizons in terms that | take permanent place in the language. | The Spanish war brought many new words into use in the English language in this country. 1 Among the new words that the up-to- date dictionary must consider are such | terms as bogey, a term in golf; borde- reau, briquet, chauffeur, expansionist, therion, immune, laverick, manywhere, open door, osteopathist, ping-pong, popover, radium, ragtime, roof-garden, rough rider, twostep, Zionism.—Hart- ford Post. i | | | ——e————— To Follow His Father. 1t is stated that as soon as Prince | Edward of Wales, who is now in his tenth year, is old enough, he will be entered as a cadet in the Royal Naval | College, Osborne, which was opened by | the King during last regatta week at Cowes. Should this prove true, the Prince will only be following the ex-| ample of his father, who, at the age of | 12 years, was sent to the Britannia with | his brother, Prince “Eddy”—his senior | by just seventcen months—to learn the rules of sea service. After spending two years on the Britannia, the two brothers started on a three years'! voyage round the world, after which | Prince George gradually ascended the; ladder of naval rank until in 1830 he was given the command of a gunboat on the West Indian station. After the death of his brother in 1892 he had to abandon his naval career in order to prepare himself for his ceremonial du- ties.—London Daily Chronicle. ———————p | HERE IS THE BIGGEST | | CHANCE YET FOR - EVERYBODY. Christmas Novelties, Christmas Presents, Christmas Toys. They Arve Yours if You Want Them. SEE THE BEAUTIFUL CHRISTMAS CALL NEXT SUNDAY worth of shoes. If anybody can tell us methods. stores. San Francisco Store, Cor. shoes your money pays for about $3 of profit and $3 how the shoes have been improved by all this handling, and by all these profits, we would like to have him do it. There isn't over $1.75 worth of leather in the best pair of shoes that ever came down street. One dollar is enough for the making by the best modern Seventy-five cents for one handling and one profit is enough to satisfy us. And that is the way you get $6 shoes for $3.50. We sell direct from tannery to wearer, and in no other way, and no other maker sells direct exclu- sively. That is one reason why you cannot get Regal quality and Regal price anywhere but in the Regal ‘There are 60 Regal Stores—20 of them in Greater New York, where the styles originate. The new styles are on sale in our San Francisco store at the same time as in the New York stores. Other dealers get the same styles a year later. REGAL THE SHOE THAT PROVES Geary and Stockton Sts. CHICAGO CITY EMPLOYES | MUST ALL WEAR B.\I)GI-ZS‘K | Council Passes Mandatory Ordinance | as a Result of the Charges of Cor- ruption Made by Mayor. CHICAGO, Dec. ,15.—All Chicago city employes whose work brings them into contact with the public will be required to wear a badge. An ordi- nance making the enforcement of this requirement imperative upon the heads of all departments has been @adopted by the Council by a vote of 39 to 24. The object of the ordinance is to prevent irregularities among eme ployes who hope to escape punishment because of the difficulty heretofore in establishing the identity of offénders. The ordinance is the outgrowth ef the charges of “graft” by the Mayor against the employes of the inspec- tion bureaus. —_——————— Declares Dividend on Common Stock. NEW YORK, Dec. 15.—The Ameri- can Sugar Reflning Company hag de- clared a dividend of % per cent on its common stock., payable January 1 next. This is the first dividend on the common stock. ADVERTISEMENTS. Every man and recason why they s The great nerve tonic and blood remedy, ;l'l;.n':-.l out hollowness, bring the ound !.M choeks, b, contatn 21 the elomeats o e ‘the world to equal them. ite . the ki ety Tetirds 334 Kearny -M-. Market m-‘. Vaa Ness Avenue. 214 Kearny Street. THE MODERN SPECIFIC THAT PRODUCES BEAUTY amo STRENGT these and there I8 mo and sil who fake them emjoy sad blood, ead CURE KIDNEY AND SR Al Aerrons Sy apasaie, Clunr e Compesioy ond 4 B, akea 400 California and Fillmore fo and old. Permancatly restore youthful RS e CONDEMNS THEM few Nervan REMEDIES aseisd nmedy oo skl gy i b o] i 3 of removal of all barmful sedi- Mhlfi“&lhn T to int: with the , stomach and liver trocble and & Mfi*’flu PR Nervin Tablets iof Rhduaasamy sas Kbiow, Sipipl denite to jalorm, 125, 03 LAY Boat Ty wilz was estion et Rare ot distases they are inteoded 0 (513, ke VIRD you saccese, ¢ 4473 Shevasup and dol "'nfi'fl-"“h s g = el Ave., Sheridan Park, Chicago, I No matter how many other. tried and found useless, remember the E bos i ibey fail to do all UNION DRUG COMPANY'S STORES: 318 Montgomery Avenue. TR S i gy = Sixth Street, : :

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