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[t THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, MONDAY.“‘ UARY 25, 1904. SERVIANS PLOT AGAINST PETER Aided by Montenegrins in Con- ACCUED OFFICIAL \ 4 AT 1] ]4 \DB L spiracy to Overthrow the 41 House of Karageorgevitch e SR | AL Sheriff of Tillamook County, in | AGITATOR ARE ACTl\'E‘ ,Oregon. Shoots Himself After | A R Havine Been Arrested for!Drunken Army Officers in Bel- Alleged Defaleation of $7000] grade Burn Portraits - of | . Russian and Austrian Rulers e AND WORRY { CAUSE OF SUICIDE e TLLNESS VIENNA, Jan. 24.—A telegram from Belgrade revorts that Servians and Montenegring living abroad are en- gaged in a vigorous agitation against the Karageargevitch dynasty and have even planned a conspiracy against King Peter. Pamphlets have been distributed Charges Made Against the Ae- cused Man Serve to Unbalance His Mind and a Girl Finds Dead in a Barn =S R Him e ch to The Call J;n. 24. —After hav- PORTLAND, Or ing been vlaced under arrest charged with ation of $7000, Henry H. Alderma ff of Tillamook County, sh = his own barn early this fired the--bullet through f mouth. yan had been seriously re than a month, and in ad¢ 1 troubles there had of a his’ physic much ith growing out ts regard which he make good ill health, gossip iiately to the barn, When the girl an hour after she n the ground T dis- hild. a girl of 11 a member ell as of the Pythias, Ancie His finan acquired p than the to fully n his boo! untants i s integrity. the account- gating court- rmed to the an claimed fire was set with ying the records ———— ral 0dq lots of regular 741 Mar- . h when v — e GRAND JURY TO TAKE UP IROQUOIS INQUIRY Coroper Finishes Investigation of Chi- cago Disaster and Findings Will Be Given to State Attorney. HICAGO. ] —A special ury, it was-decided to-day, will y to con- t oner’s jury of the testimony the inquest the special ses- eopen the question of re- wi sibi The Coroner’'s verdict will probably returned to-morrow night. The dir 1l be referred by the Coro- te's Attorney for action. hat the present jury. n next Saturday and hand, could not un- ion in the the- nd Jury will be fir ner. Nearly a hundred wit- 1 be heard AR RECEIVED BY THE POPE Mrs. and Miss Loughborough Visit His Holiness and Secure an Autograph. ROME, Jan. 24—Right Rev.| Stephen Rivelle, Bishop of Sandhurst, Australia, was received in private audience by the Pope to-day and pre- sted to the Pontiff Mrs. and Miss oughhorough of San Francisce, who | brought with them a photograph of the Pope, to which he affixed his sig- nature at their request e s Escitement in Berlin Theater. | BERLIN, Jan. 24.—During the per- formance to-night at the Deutsches Theater the failing of a portion of the ceiling of the corridor caused great excitement. With the exception of an usher, who was slightly hurt, no one | was injured. After the excitement sub- | sided the play was resumed. | { ADVERTISEMENTS. Eczema Salt Rheum, Ringworm, T Acne or other‘mn rt‘r.subi‘& l_?ro-;dymlievedandcumdby This scientific germicide, which disease germs. Used and endorsed by the medical Sold profession everywhere. by leading druggists. If not :ti‘i'mts send 25 cents for a bottle. The genuine bears m‘ signature. Accept no Qf dhattamtme i New York Weak Men and Women HOULD USE DAMIANA BITTERS, TEE Great Mexican Remedy; gives health and strength to sexual organs. | Journal from Sam n Tillamook [ in one of the Balkan States des(‘rihingi King Peter's active agitation against | King Alexander and making serious charges against him. While the Ser- vian Government declines to consider this movement seriously, instructions have been issued to keep a sharp watch over Servian - and Montenegrin emi- grants. It is conjectured that this con- spiracy is the work of either Monte- negrins or the sisters of the late Quean Draga. A dispatch the Neues Wiener n, which is six miles s that a number of to from Belgrade SHOES FIT “THE TRACKS IV GARDEY Leon Soeder’s Shoemarks Iden- tical With Imprints Found Drying Mud Retains Them R R 7 | ENTERS BY WINDOW e e New Evidence of Damaging Na- ture Is Secured Against Ae- | eused Murderer of Blaise and the Police Feel Satisfied ' ST o | | | A valuable piece of evidence has been : secured by the police against Leon Soe- | der, charged with the murder of Joseph Blaise. The shoes worn by Soeder on the night of the murder have been found to fit to a nicety the shoeprint marks discovered in the yard under the front window of the room in which Soeder and Blaise lived. On the morning that the murdered drunken army officers belonging to the | Blaise was found lying in the Taylor “murder " recently de a dem- , Street cut of Russian Hill Soeder’'s aurant in Belgrade landlord, Joseph Neiblas, discovered during which por- aits of Emperor Francis Joseph and the Czar were burned. The offending rs were court-martialed, but upon special order from King Peter the eedings were stopped. EAST'S COLD WAVE HOLOS RECORD | tective Gibson they twere covered with Continued from Page 1, Column 1. f the flood swell was reached at this afternoon, when the st -four feet the h v or partially fall in th o inches, in the cit ture has of suffer ond st idents are have made ar- accus- not a single v, and the 5000 in second illsides, whiie the suf- fering is intense Bellaire, Bridge- and Martin's F on the Ohio uation is not so bad, as the gher. RG, Jan. 24—The flood of rday has in a great measure d this point, but portions of the o cities are still submerged. In Alle- v the gas supply was erratic, and tribution of coal by the city au- thorities in the poorer neighborhoods brought about a riotous condition. When the fuel was dumped in. the streets men, women and children fought for its possession, requiring a strong guard of police to nreserve order. W CUMBERLAND, W. Va.gJan. Fully one-half of this towp fs un- ler twelve feet of water to-night, and 1 blizzard is raging. Dozens of facto- are submerged and the big Chelsea Ch aged the the town is under ten to fifteen feet of water and practicallly the entire pepu- At Empire, two miles above on opposite side of the Ohio River, lation miles has covered burg Railroa is encam in box cars. Six above Empire a heavy landslide the Cleveland and Pitts- d trackse. e Porto Rico Swept by Gale. SAN JUAN, P. R, Jan. 24—For the past five days a high easterly gale has been blowing over Porto Rico and the record for thirteen yvears for a contin- ued blow has been broken. The wind has done much damage to the young sugar cane. The crew of the schooner Sc s and part of her cargo were saved, but the boat was lost. The high wind has interrupted communication by wireless telegraphy between San Juan and Culebra. PR Towboat Men Are Missing. CINCINNATI, Jan. 24.—The ice around Coney Island gave way and sank the towboat Adelle at the Browns landing, together with a barge of coal. Loss $15,000. Three men employed on the Adelle are missing and are supposed to have been | drowned. ——ee————— To Cure Grip in Two Days. Laxative Bromo Quinine removes the cause. To get the genuine call for the full name. 25c. * e—————— YOUTHFUL BANDITS ARE UNDER ARREST Three Boys Say They Wrecked a Train That They Might Rob the Dead. / DENVER, Jan. 24.—A special to the Republican from Las Vegas, N. M., says that three boys, Myron Ald- rich aged 14, Lowell Ellis aged 13 and William Denton aged 15, were arrest- ed there to-day and confessed having wrecked an extra Denver and Rio Grande freight train at Florence, Colo., on January 10. The boys said they were after the passenger. train, which was late, and intended robbing the dead and injured passengers. ————————————— FIGHTS MANY DUELS FOR FAMILY HONOR ina Company plant is greatly dam-/ shoe tracks in the molst earth of the garden on which the front windows of the room occupied by Soeder and Blaise looks. Evidence was found that Soeder changed his shoes after the murder wag committed. A pair of calfskin shoes of a’ peculiar shape were found in Soe- der’s room on the Monday following the murder. They were of an English bull- dog shape of an uncommon last. When the shoes were found by De- mud of the same variety that lines the cut in Russian Hill, whére the dead body of Blaise was found. They were taken as evidence and it was not until several days later that Neiblas called the attention of the police to several | well-defined shoeprints in the garden | in front of the window to Soeder's room. The shoes were at once taken to the tracks and found tb fit exactly in the imprints in'the mud, which had become somewhat hardened. This new evi- dence goes to prove that Soeder entered his room on the night of the murder through _the window. Landiord Nei- blas has said that if Soeder had come in by the door he and his wife would have heard him. Soeder chose the win- dow as the least noisy means of egress, in order that he might get into his room and change the gray suit that he was seen wearing the night he left the Mexican restaurant on Broadway with his brother-in-law, Blaise. The police have about completed their search for evidence against Soeder and last night was spent by Detective Gib- son in getting into shape what he has secured. The Coroner's inquest will be held to-morrow and the preliminary hearing in the Police Court on Wednesday. The police hope to be ready when Soe- der appears in the Police Court on Wednesday to show enough evidence of his guilt to have him bound over for' trial in the Superior Court. | ‘There is an abundance of evidence. to show the eriminal nature and record of Soeder. - He has been in San Quentin twice for burglary, once from this city and once from Alameda County. | » — - -+ AMERICAR MARINES STOP RIOTING Al e B Continned from Page 1, Column 6. churia is solely a matter between Rus- sia and China. The Svket and the Listoe have raised an outery over the reported sending of Chinese troops to Manchuria, and the latter newspaners declare that if it is true that these troops go with the pur- | pose of threatening the railroad be- tween Port Arthur and Vladivostok it means war with China, and not with Japan. In an interview Soo Wel Teh, | the Chinese Minister to Russia, m\ quoted as having said: H | " ““The talk of China going to war with any one is absurd. We have no inten- tion of fighting. If Chinese troops are being sent north it is solely for the pur- ' pose of inspiring confidence in our own people, who are alarmed and who would become panic stricken in the event of | hostilities between Russia and Japan. Personally 1 have no knowledge of this | reported movement, but the fact of it | would not necessarily be communicated | to me.” | | 'The Russ has attacked the Novoe| Vremya for what it terms its corre- | spondent’s stupid mistake about the‘ destination of the American Asiatic squadron, the Novoe Vremya having said the Americarf warships were going to Yongampho, when actually their des- tination was Olongapo, in the Philip- pines, and for presaging American in-| tervention in the Far East. TheiRuss declares that as the interests of Amer- | ica are commercial the American Gov-| ernment requires friendly relations with Russia. ———— WILL BECOME A TROOPSHIP. The Oriental Steamship Company's steamship America Maru will sail at 1 o’clock to-day for Hongkong and | | Yokohama via Honolulu. | -In all | probability this will be the last voyage | the America Maru will make from this port for some time. - ‘Ae¢cording’ to authentic reports, on her arrival . in Neiblas’ Front Yard,Where | TO CHANGE CLOTHES| 'ligence of the players. | other clever German ‘a laugh at every line, ! three escaped unhurt. As for Krohn, he BERLIN, Jan. 24.—1t is reported here | that a lieutenant in the army named Krohn, who is stationed at Pirna, Sax- | ony, has recently fought eight duels | and is about to undertake a ninth en- | counter in defense of his family honor. | Krohn has had the best of the meet- ings, for it is said that two of his op- | ponents were severely wounded and| three others slightly wounded, while at her home port she is to .turned | over to the Japanese GoOVe ent for| transport- service. A ‘ After leaving Honolulu the Affieri- ca Maru will proceed to Midway Island, where she will find cable .ad- vices aweiting” her regarding the sit- uation in the East. Should war haye been declared, she can be on the out for any Russian ships that be cruising in hér path. |~ The Hongkong Maru of th e line, which was scheduled to 1 from Hongkong for this port on January 20, is still at Hongkong awaiting orders. 1 may had his ear nipped in the eighth en- counter. —_————— ENGLISH EXPEDITIO) MASSACRED BY NATIVES LONDON, Jan. 25.—The Foreign Of- fice has received news of the massacre THIBETANS WILL OFFER WAR. CHUMBI, British India, Jan. 24.— “t first time and perform in a marvelous of a British expedition under the auspices of the East Africa Syndicate by Tarkhana tribesmen in the neigh- borhood of Rudolf Lake, East Africa. Several white men were murdered, but no details of the occurrence have been received. e — Koreans Loot Private Dwellings.. BEOUL, Jan. 25.—Korean soldiers and police at Pyenzyang, disguised as robbers, have looted all the wealthy native houses. - Foreigners are grow- ing very uneasy over the situation and the natives seem very apathetic. Ex- Depot, 323 Market, | tremely cold weather prevails. Colonel Yourghusband, commander of the British expeditions to Thibet, hg had a friendly interview with a gen- eral from L'Hassa and a number of | Lamas, who came out to meet the ' British mission. The general red | favorable terms for Colonel Young- husband to retire and on his refusal indicated that the British adyané¢e would be opposed. : e S———— R —— Santa Cruz Physician Dead. SANTA CRUZ, Jan. 24.—Dr. Oscar L. Gordon died this afternoon. He was fore coming to California he was su- perintending a reform school in Maine, GERMAN ACTORS D0 GOOD WORK ;l’roductlon of ““Als Ich Wieder- kam” by Amateur Thes- pians Remarkably Artistie SR 4 NEW BILL AT ORPHEUM “David Ha,fum" at the Grand | Opera-House Is Well Worth the Price of Admittance e It was an organization of amateurs, | the Alameda Lustspiel Ensemble, that| (played “Als Ich Wiederkam” ("As I Returned”) last evening at the Colum- bia Theater, and positive knowledge of | ; that fact was necessary to convince the stranger that dropped in that he was .not being entertained by well-trained professionals. 1In ‘the audience were some students of stage technique to whom much of the German: diglogue was unintelligible, but they seemed to derive no less enjoyment from the per- formance than was reflected by the fre- quent and hearty laughter of those who understood the full significance of ‘the lines. That is saying something favor- | able for the dramatic instinct and intel- { It is no exag- geration at all to state that the work of some of the principals has never been excelled in completeness on the same stage. It was in the little things—the minu- | CTIENS COMPEL A MARRIAGE Indignant Men in Eureka At tend Wedding Ceremony Aft- er Threatening Prospective They Cure Stem in Them Groom With Tar and Feathers 'All physicians agree that the element | ——. .. | of faith 4?1“ a gredt deal to do ip the - cure of . OFFICIALS ACT | Firm peliet ana confidence in 3 fam- N Sh 2T B > ys! . onfidenc: DURING -THE NIGHT,| ana taith ia o patent medicine have PR producéd remarkable cures in all ages. This is especially true in _nervous “troubles, and no field offers So prolific |a harvest for the quack and charlatan | as the diseases arising from a weak or | run-down nervous system, Nevertheléss, the most common of all ' diseases—indigestion and stomach trou- | bles, which in turn.cause nervous dis- Members of a Committee Escort the Man to a House Where the Woman “Iss “Awakened and Quickly Made a Wife tee—that the art of the actors mani- fested itself.- Perfect self-possession | and poise were qualities possessed by | all, but it was more than absence of | self-conscionisness that contributed the deft side plays—the appropriate shrugs, | smiles, pouts and other expressive pan- | tomime—that made the silent charac-|iain if he would marry the woman it They | ters appear so essential to the stage picture whise two or more of the.other | characters were conversing. There was | none of the vapid, chorus-girl-like gaz- | ing at the audience, that mars the nat- | uralness and harmony of situations in' the best American managed dramatic offerings. Every one of those amateurs seemed to be perfectly imbued with the | spirit of the play and to thoroughly “feel’” the character he or she was im- personating. Stage direction may have been responsible for some of this-re-| markable self-effacement, but the best | stage director in the world could not create the artistic temperament. He could only guide i “As I Returned” is a sequel to “At' the White Horse Tavern,” played by the same company several weeks ago, | and it simply places the same char- | acters in new and equally ludicrous ! situations. Throughout the . perform- | ance the big audience was Kkept in an alternation of giggles and guffaws, and the finish of each act was followed by | a clamor that brought the leading peo- ple before the curtain several times. The staging was as perfect as the act- | ing, so it was no cause for wonder when | Stage Manager Arthur Beeker was| noisily summoned to the front to re- ceive a great ovation. A vocal quartet . and an invisible mandolin orchestra interpret charming music. { The company is now rehearsing an- comedy. “Das Opferlamm,” and it would be well for | San Francigco's large army of -aspi-| rants for dramatic recognition—aye, and some of the fat-salaried profes- | sionals—to witness its' production. Even if they do not understand the language of the fatherland. they may leam from_exampdp. how to do some hings that are just as necessary to complete acting as {s the mouthing of the lines. s PREE S People that paid their $2 apiece to.see “David Harum’' at the Columbia Thea- ter last season can obtain equally good seats in the Grand Opera-house this week for less than half that amount of meney and witness almost as good a production of the same play. True it is that “Billy” Crane is not doing the title part, but the actor who has suc- ceeded him, William H, Turner. fol- lows the Crane method so closely as to sustain all the effective phases of the original characterization, and thereby pronounces himself a most ar- | tistic imitator. Nor is the present company just as strong, individually or collectively, as its predecessor, but | it is strong enough to do full justice to | every personation in the group. Al the original scenery has been retained. | and in a mighty good state of preser- vation it i, when one considers the ' wear and tear to which it has been| subjected. | It is paying inadequate tribute to the excellence of, “David Harum” to say | that it is the best show given at the Grand Opera-house sgince “Ben Hur” was there, for the interim was filled by some of the toughest itinerants that ever struggled westward. To state that the dramatization of Mr. Wes- cott’s clever character story is worth double the prices charged for the priv- ilege of witnessing it would be no ex- aggeration. i . The' Rays—Johnny and- Emma—made merry at the Orpheum last night. Johnny Ray does a peculiar line of | work that cannot be duplicated. He | is the only one of his kind and brings One thing no- ticeable was the reddetion in corpu- | lence in Emma Ray. Instead of the | massive actress that “kicked her hus- band about the stage while he per- formed that office at home,” she has grown more to preportion and Johnny seems to stand a better chance in life: They. produce very good sketch, “A Hot Old Time,” and there is no mis- t?tke about their being favorites in this city. . : Oliver T. Holden and Winifred Flor- ence appear in a pretty comedy oper- atic sketch, “The Fairy of Killarney.” The text of the act is an old legend in which the fairy queen of the lakes pre- sides over the destinies of one Clan| O'Sullivan and the scene at the fairy well furnishes excellent music and dia- Jogue. Duffy, Sawtelle and Duffy, in their one act playlet, “Papa’s Sweet- heart,” give entire satisfaction. Mas- ter James Duffy, a youth not yet in long trousers, gives the audience its money’s worth and his part is the pivot on which the plot revolves. Cordua and Maud, European hand balancers on double wires, are on the bills for the . N manner. Kelly and Violette, the “fashion plate singing duo,” receive as great an ova- tion as they did last week. Their selec- tions please and are rendered in artis- tic manner. Harry C. Stanley and Doris Wilson repeat their musical ¢omedy sketch,, “Before the Ball,” and the audi- ance applauds the dramatic'soprano of Miss Wilson .s well as the comedy of Stanley. The Stein FEretto Family, comedy hand jumping acrobats, and Irving Jones, the man that writes ‘his own songs, complete, with the g rlctures, an iInteresting programme. - ————————— ¥iji Islands Suffer From Storm. MELBOURNE, Victoria, Jan. 24.— A disastrous hurricane has swept the | Fiji islands, resulting in great loss of life and property. ' To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. refund the money if it fails to Al cure. ! B. W. Grove’s signature is on each box. 25¢. * —_—— Special Dispatch t6 The Call. EUREKA. Japn. 24—A novel wedding | occurred last night. in’ this city. The | | bride was not apprised of the fact that | gtrepgthen your* nerves and heart, but she was to be married until the bride-’ | groom "and ‘the Justice' of the ‘Peace and certain membérs of an impromptu vigilance committee awoke. hér from sleep and informed her of the purpose of the nocturnal visity The groom fis Charles Perrino, a barber, . and the bride Emma M. Jewett, an artist. The | ceremony "took place in the apartment of the bride in the presence of mem- bers of the committee and a sleepin babe. At about 10 o'clock a number of citi- zens gathered to find Perrino to ascer- was claimed he had deceived. found him.in a’saloon and communi- cated the purpgse of their visit. He de- clared that he Wwas willing to marry, but desired to put cff the ceremony till Monday. The committee, thinking that he would-leave town, gave him one| minute to make up his mind whether he would marry or quences. The consequences were Sug- gested to him as being a coat of tar and feathers and a speedy passage out i of towr, He chose the former. County Clerk Haw and Justice of the Peace Peter McGeorge were aroused | 2nd the legal requirements attended to. The party then drove to the woman's house and the . ceremony was soon over, . DEATH SUDDEN TO FRIEDRICH, DUKE OF ANHALT DESSAU, Duchy of Anhalt, Ger- many, Jan. 24.—Friedrich, Duke of Anhait, died at Castle Ballenstedt to- day, aged 73 years. He suffered an apopletic stroke yesterday. pomitlocis e DEATH OF GENERAL KIBBE. Old-Time California Indian Fighter and Gold Hunter Passcs Away. NEW YORK, Jan. 25.—General Will- jam Chauncey Kibbe, an old Indian figher and goldhunte: during 1349, is dead at his home in Brooklyn, from tuberguiosis. . He was in his eighty-second year. Born in Illinois, General Kibbe came as.a’ young man to Brooklyn and se- cured a position as teacher in the pubiie schools. In 1849 he had become a prin- cipal, but resigned to seek his fortune in California. As a miner he was unforfunate and after a while he drifted into other pur- suits. He took part in suppressing many of the early Indian uprisings in California and Nevada, and, finally, when Leland Stanford became Gov- ernor, General Kibbe became adjutant | general on his staff. After the Civil War General Kibbe returned to Brooklyn and resumed teaching. st ¥l Mrs. Tibbetts Passes Away. BERKELEY, Jan. 24.—Mrs. Amanda Tibbetts, a well-known resident of Berkeley, died suddenly early this morning at her home, 1707 Shattuck avenue., Death was due to acute pneu- monia, the deceased Having been ill | only a few days. She leaves a hus- band and two sons, one of whom is Sidney Tibbetts, the crack two-mile runner at the University of California. She was a native of Wisconsin, 49 years of age. to the former home of the family at Campbells, Santa Clara County, for burial. e e e Death of Mrs. Emily Dean. OAKLAND, Jan. 24.—Mrs. Emily Dean, a resident of this city for twenty- eight years, died to-day at the family residence, 1325 Jackson street. Mrs. Dean was a native of Maryland, 68 years old. Surviving children are Charles C. Dean, James B. Dean and Mrs. James G. Allen. The funeral will be held Tuesday morning at 10:30 o'clock from the family residence. - Pioneer Dies in Browns Valley. NAPA, Jan. 24—John Buhman, a pioneer resident of this State, died at his home in Browns Valley yesterday afternoon. He was a native of Ger- many and 73 years of age. He came to America in 1850 and ~settled in San Francisco. Drinking water was scarce in those days and he went into the business of selling it by the pailful, de- livering it from door to door. About thirty years ago he came to Napa and started a dairy, which he conducted until his death. R g Death of Merton C. Allen. Merton C. Allen, who for a number of years had been prominently identi- fied with the journalistic and political history of San Francisco, died at his residence in this city yesterday, after a brief illness. Mr. Allen was a native of this State and was prominent in the order of Native Sons of the Golden West, having been past presidént of Alcatraz Parlor. He was also a member of the Woodmen of the World and an earnest worker in beh:If of that order. A widow and three children, Clifford, Chesley and Alfred Allen, survive him. The funeral will be held to-morrow afternoon from the undertaking parlors of Bunker & Lunt. The interment will be at Petaluma. K B SN ‘Well-Known Butcher Dies. James Edward Bond, for more than passed away at his home, 2813 street, vesterday, after an llness of six weeks. Mr. Bond was a native of Brooklyn, N. Y. He married a daughter of the late William T. Gar- mn‘cnwm take the conse- | in California ! The remains will be sent | eases, heart troubles, consumption and loss of flesh—require something besides faith to cure. p |* Mere faith wili not-digest your food | for you;will not give you an appetite. will' Mot increage your - flesh and ¢Stuart's Dyspepsta Tablets . will do | these things, becatise -they are com- | posed of the elements of digestion: they | contain the/juwices, acjds and peptones | necessary to_the digestion and assimi- | lation of allywholesome food. Stuart’s’ Dyspepsia. Tablets will di- | gest food/if placed in a jar or bottle in water heated 4o, 98 degreeq, and they | take . { Whether you have faith that they will or not. They invigorate the stomach, make pure blood and strong nerves in the only’ way that nature cen .do it, and Fwell digested. It Is not what we eat, but what we digest that does us good by druggists at 50 cents for full-size i package. f dressing F. A. Stuart Co., | Mich. ONLY ONE WAY | TO PURIFY THE BLOOD, INCREASE FLESH AND STRENGTH AND TO CURE INDIGESTION. SECRET PATENT MEDICINES WILL NOT DO IT. There Is a Simpler and Better Way. | and that is through the stomach and | digestive organs. Why? | stomach and digestive orga blood and fles bone, nerves and sinew. Did you ever see a person blessed with a healthy, vigorous stomach and digestion who had impure blood, muddy, sallow complexion, or who had weak nerves, sleepless nights and the thousand and one pains and aches aris- ing from poor digestion? No:; because perfect digestion converts the food eaten into pure blood, strong nerves and muscles, and all the flesh a person needs to have for health, symmetry and beauty. ' Every person knows whether or not his or her digestion is what it should be, but every person does not know what is the safest and best way to se- cure and preserve a healthy condition | of the digestive organs. It is not done | by the use of any wonderful secret pat- ent medicine, but by the use of certain harmless digestive principles, which, | taken at meals, anyway, regardless of the weak condi- tion of the stomach. Dr. Brooks recommends a combina- i tion of vegetable essences, fruit salts, pure aseptic pepsin and Golden Seal, prepared in convenient tablet form, and sold by druggists everywhere under the name of Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets, | These pleasant tasting tablets are to be dissolved in the mouth after each meal, and, mingling in the food in the | stomach, digest it perfectly. There is | nothing wonderful about this. Any | physician or chemist knows that | Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets will do this | because repeatedly tested and proved, | and thousands of cured dyspeptics have | found it to be true also. Dr. Harlandson states that these tab- | lets increase flesh because they digest | flesh-forming food like eggs, meat and | ordinary every-day food; for the same | reason they purify the blood and strengthen weak nerves. In no other way can it be done, because flesh, blood fand nerves are obtained from the food | we eat. Dr. Jennison once stated that he be- | lieved a , 50-cent package of Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets would give more real | benefit than fifty dollars’ worth of or- | dinary doctor’'s fees. These tablets may be found at any drug store. ? HEART DISEASE. SOME FACTS RFEGARDING THE RAPID INCREASE OF HEART TROUBLES. Do Not Be Alarmed, But Look for the Cause. Heart troubles, at least among Amer- |icans, are certainly increasing, and | while this may be largely due to the excitement and worry of American bus- iness life, it is more often the result of weak stomachs, of poor digestion. Real, organic heart disease is incur- able; but not one case in a hundred of heart trouble is organic. b The close relation between heart trouble and poor digestion is because both organs are controlled by branches of the same great nerves, the Sympa- thetic and Pneumogastric. In another way also the heart is af- fected by that form of poor digestion which causes gas and fermentation from half-digested food; there is a feel- ing of oppression and heaviness in, the chest, caused by pressure of the dis- tended stomach on the heart and lungs, interfering with their &ction; hence arise palpitation and short breath. Poor digestion also poisons the blood, makes it thin and watery, which irri- u"l'el:e and w the heart. will do it much-more effectively when | n. into “the "stomach after meals, | that is from plenty of wholesome frmd,} Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets are sold | There is only one way to purify the | blood, only one way to increase flesh, | Because the | make | will digest the food | most sensible treatment for heart trouble is to improve the diges- tion and to insure the prompt assimi- lation of food. ‘This can best be done by the regular use after meals of some safe, pleasant and effective digestive preparation, like Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets, which may be found at most drug stores, and which contain valuable, harmless di- gestive elements in a pleasant, con- '?ik:t lf:;‘ to that th e say e ¥ persistent use of Stuart's e Tablets at meal time will cure any | form of stomach trouble except cancer of the stomach. Full- | Little book on cause and cure of | stomach troubles mailed free by ad-| Marshall, ADVERTISEMENTS. INO FAITH CUR ~ About Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets. ach Troubies and Indigestion, Anyway, Whether You Have Faith or Not. free. Address F. A. Stuart Co., Mar- shall, Mich. ARE YOU THIN? Do You Want to Become Fleshy? MPLE RULES. A FEW Flesh and Not Fat Is What Is Needed. What thin people want is flesh, and not fat. To be symmetrical and prop- erly nroportioned every persom shouid have a certain amount of flesh. To L plump does not necessarily mean to fat. Fat is undesirable; it clogs and re- tards the action of every muscle, inter- feres with the healthy action of the heart and lungs, and when excessive predisposes to fatty degeneration of vital organs, to say nothing of the dis- comfort, more or less, resulting from excessive adipose tissue. Common sense would suggest that if one wishes to become fleshy and plump the thing most needed would be flesh- forming foods; in other words, album- inous foods, like eggs, beef, oatmeal. ete. The kinds «f food that make flesh are the foods that form the greater part of our daily bill of fare. many peo=- Now, ple the only reason s remain thin is becav achs do not properly and digest and assimilate the flesh-forming beefsteak and eggs we eat every day There are thousands of such people, and they are really dyspeptic, although they may not suffer any particular pain or inconvenience from their stom- ac If such persons would take, with their meals, some preparation like Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets the food would be quickly cigested, and the proper degree of plumpness very soon secured, because th tablets are pre- pared exactly for that purpose. They will digest every variety of flesh-form- ing food. which is the sole re they so aquickly build strengthen thin, dyspeptic women. Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets cure dys- pepsia and every form of indigestion on this common-sense plan, that they digest _ the od promptly, giving strength to every nerve and organ of the body, while at the same time the stomach has a chance to rest and re- cover its natural vigor. Nothing fur- ther is required cure any stomach trouble, or to make thin. dyspeptic peo- ple strong. plump and well This excellent preparation is manu- factrred by F. a. Stuart Co., Marshall, Mich., and sold by druggists every- where at 50 cents per package. FREE TO MILLIONS. ason w up a men and A Valuable Little Book Sent Free for the Asking. Medical books are not always inter- esting reading, especially to people en- joying good health, But as a matter of fact scarcely one person in ten is pe! ctly healthy, and even with such sconer or later sickness must come. It is aiso a well-established truth that nine-tenths of all diseases orig- inate with the breaking-down of the di- gestion; a weak stomach weakens and impoverishes the system, making it easy for disease to gain a foothold. Nobody need fear consumption, kid- ney disease, liver trouble or a weak heart and nervous system as long as the digestion is good and the stomach able to assimilate plenty of whalesome food. Stomach weakness shows itself in a score of ways, and this little book de- scribes the symptoms and causes and points the way to cure ¢o simple that any one can understand and apply. Thousands have some form of stom- ach trouble and do not know it. They ascribe the headache, the languor, ner< vousness, insomnia, palpitation, consti- pation and similar symptoms to some other cause than the true ome. Qet your digestion on the right track and the heart trouble, lung trouble, liver disease or nervous debility will rapidly disappear. This little book treats entirely on the cause and removal of indigestion and its accompanying annoyances. It describes the symptoms of Aecid Dyspepsia, Nervous Dyspe; Slow Dyspepsia, Amylaceous Dyspepsia, Ca< tarrh of the Stomach, and all aflictions of the digestiv- organs in plain lane guage, easily understood, and the cause removed. It gives valuable suggestions as to diet, and contains a table giving length of time required to digest various arti- cles of food, something every persom with weak digestion should know. No price is asked, but simply send your name and address, plainly writ< ten on postal card, to F. A. Stuart Co., Marshall, Mich., requesting a little hmla on Stomach diseases, and it will be sent promptly by return mail. STUART’'S DYSPEPSIA