The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, February 9, 1904, Page 2

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[T} RANCISCO CAL UESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 190% ERTISEMENTS. ADV. | { DYSPEPSIA CURED IN SEVEN WEEKS John K. Schiappich, President Unigue Trading Co.. Reading, Pa., says:‘ -'I‘ tiad Dyspepsia So Badly Wothing Would Stay on My Stomach. | caul!ln t ! Sleep and Lost Fiesh Dal Duffy’'s Pure Malt Whiskey Cured Me in I i | Seven Weeks, and | am Stouter and Stronger Than Ever Bzfore.” DUFFY'S PURE MALT WHISKEY { was in the depths of despair and suf- 1 kinds of torture from dyspepsia. lition was so bad that nothing would in taking Duffy’s i in seven weeks I my medicin: A perfectly JOHN mean Lo | PICH of modern civil- It rob: SNOW AND ICE GIVE VIGOR TO LIFE IN WASHINGTON Californian Uses Photographs to Show Citizens of the Capital Startling Comparisons in Weather—Korea’'s Mysterious Minister toLeave * BY S. w. ALL. CALL BUREAU, HOTEL BARTON, WASHINGTON, Feb. 8.—Not ~forget- ting to mention the weather in the gen- eral discussion, it should be satd. that Washington, that may be by many months. There has peen excellent sleigh- scenes as are offered by thé streets of Ottawa with her winter carnivals. Perhaps it is to secure the advantage of these conditions by way of offering Los Angeles has been in the city dur- ing the week showing photggraphs of ry ten people 'a sharp contrast that A. H. Heber of | | Mr. Sang can and will talk he will have | & whole Jot to answer for in the silence of Cho. Representative J. N. Gillette of Hum- boldt County has renewed an acquaint- my stomach. not even peptonized | ance in the person of Representative “wi seribed by the doctors. ' supposed to stand in the Southern belt. | ygeh of La Crosse, Wis., whom he has i could mot sleep %% | has been enjoying an uninterrupted | not met since hyjs schoolboy days. The season of skating for nearly three|two went te school together at Sparta, Wis., their teacher being Miss Anna E. Smith. In the pieasure of their meet- nd could eat any- | ing for the past week, and during cer- 4 R Chout SHtaes. tain afterncons Pennsylvania avenue|!DE and the discusslon of their boy- of indig 1tn brilliant d exciting hood escapades and the devious roads welshi “wnd | Bas wituakhed sRCALIRTISRS € by which they had traveled from the Wisconsin town to a meeting place on the floor of the House of Representa- tives it was developed that their teach-~ er, Miss Smith, is also under the roof of the Capitol, or at least under a roof in the Capitol, being a clerk in the In- terior Department—the only clerk in e e I ey, 1 San | the service of the Government, it Is | Diego County, Californta, on ground|®8ids Who may boast:two full-fledged that two vears ago. he declares, Was |members of Congress among het former i p'mlp “m:‘s Ia',‘fiil The petition of the Northern Cali- medi irrigation, the result of the dig- | fornia Indian Associatlon, sl:bmnu—a e stomach gine of some 500 miles of ditches, |'© COngress a few days ago, has met eable to any stomach. Cures Stomach Troub v eon Southern Railway writes iffusive stimulant and back oids, grippe, catarrh, lungs; ner- is the only t rr s a guarantee. ‘When you ask for Dufiy’'s Pure Malt Whiskey be sure you get the pulous dealers, mindfulof the excellence of this preparation, will enp ‘mitations and malt whiskey substitutes, whick are put on dicine, his Demand “Duffy’s” and be sure you get it. Malt Whiskey which contains medicinal, Pure Walt Whiskey is sold iz sealed bottles oniy: never in flask or bulk. Look for the trade-mark, the “Oid Chemist.” cork is unbroken. Beware of refille 4 bottles. through which water from the Colorado California delegation. The effect of water on the desert in belief to the legislator from any other part of the country, says Mr. Heber, and raquires an unwavering front and plenty of evidence to convince. DIPLOMAT CHILDREN REVEL. | | i { | with prompt and vigorous opposition 1 fE F River now flows. His visit here is ‘nl":;‘:ho!u];e a ‘I‘x‘_:'(’;:_“':f"i;’ ; ‘:f“n:;%'“l’:z secure some legislation, and he has been | * G Sl e i 1650 very orm endeavaring Ao eilist -the a1 of the (REHOD arid gt his ing g o printed for the information of Con- gress, APPEAL TVOR INDIANS. the production of s off ' 4 gra fa, maize, et of | The petitioners beseech Congress to the summer and winter sunshine of (€rant lands in severalty to some thou- | Southern California, is very difficult of | sands of landless and homeless In- ans in Northern California, substan- ially as has been done for Indians not only in other parts of California but in other States. The petition or pro- test of the Carlisle Schodl is signed by twenty-four persons, who have Before getting entirely away from 'peen in the Indian service from—<ne the weather it may be interesting to |year to thirty-nine years. note how the children of the Chinese | fhe protest declares that the wide Minister and others of the legation | gistribution in small communities of are enjoying it—coming as they do|the California Indians referred to from the sunniest sections of the|places them far in advance of any In- flowery empire. Arlu Liang-Cheng, | dians in the United States in point of pungest son, celebrated sreary a few days ago, giving a p: to which the legation children were invited, together 4vith a lot of American children, distinguished in diplomatic and official life. The inister has a sumptuous home 01 Nineteenth street—and the party had a sumptuous as well as a strenu- the Ministe his ninth nni 2, the Minister's nephew, aged 9; nie Yung Kwai, aged 7, son of the at| advantage for self-support, civilization and assimilation with The protest further urges that poverty is a good thing and is not confined in its blessings to the Indians, as many white people enjoy its advantages, which “stimulates healthy effort. It would be quite as just and proper for the General Government,” says the ch, far from relieving the sick, | i B o the onty Mesomeely |ous time. Or perhaps it was the elders | protest, “to’' do for them (the white health-giving oualitie: Duffy's that had a strenuous time. | people) what the California society : i Not counting the Americans there [asks to be done for the Indians, and on the label, and be certain th | e deaicae B U ere the party Ardee and Arlu, the | the pauperizing results would be a bottle Medical booklet ster's sons, aged 11 and 9; Ah{the same. * * * Whatever the condition of the California Indians without land may be, they are in- EXBECUTIVE ABILI D Al Al ¥ TAT first secre y of the legation, and |finitely more fortunate than those in OF FORBES RECOGNIZED <\ | | Bernie's two little sisters, Elizabeth |Oklahoma and elsewhere who are | i L and Gertrude, aged 5 and 4. { heavily landed, and, therefore, Ofier of Place as Philippine Commis- | The distinctive feature of the cele- | through their unearned resources, Also a Tribute 10 His Great Technical Knowledge. . . —1t sioner is S IMPROVING Weakness Continues, but He Is bration was the presentation of sleds to the members of the party and the had in the house was only v to the fun they had in the This is merely preliminary snow outside later on. to show that all the merriment among | borne down by idleness and its destroy- ing influences, exaggerated through the usual demoralizing frontier condi- tions.” . The Northerf"California Indian As- sociation would seem to have met P = L the children of Washington is not|something going in the opposite direc- S Resting Easily and Stom- limited to the boys at ghe White |tion. | ? c . B35S House. These latter, by the way, Sk U ac s p Py ) h Is in Better, Condition y,ic veen largely engaged these days| Speaker Cannon has revived one of | e in snowballing the distinguished folks | the old blue laws of the Capitol and . ® PATIENT NOW T ‘ES F who come and go at the Executive it is no longer permissible to smoke 3y T 2 FAKES FOOD yansion on the floor of the House. There is - —_—— But if life at the home of the Chi- | considerable fretting under the rule, . Physicians IXDress s nese Minister is relieved by the riot |but the Speaker says he suffers as : s Express Opinion | 5 gren—where it might not be ex-{ much as and more than most by | Hanna's condition to-night was a little mo: ouraging, though the extreme which has been the worst weakness, with Korea. read the dispatches under St. Peters- That It Will Be Necessary to pected to be—it is distinctly different | its enforcement. Either the rule is & One excellent reason for | good or it is not and until it is re- Let Disease Run Its Course :tnis is that there are no children there. | pealed by the House there shall be no —_— For a long time past, for reasons that | smoking and the sergeant at arms and WASHIN Feb. B~ Senstor may be well understood by those who | assistants to the doorkeeper will see to it. On the Senate side there is no burg, Seoul and Tokio date}, the house | smoking allowed, even in the elevators of the Korean Minister has been un- der surveillance, so to speak, by the ror lobbies. "3 T S ] e e . 8 Postor- | feature of , continues, He had newspaper contingent of Washington.| Coliector of Customs D. H. Jarvis f California—Flow- | > fairly quiet . rested a little bet- KOREA IS A PUZZLE. and Deputy Collector J. H. Causten of . s g e ter and * > was less irritability of the Blt if hes beeq titghty-small piok- Alaska are in the city to confirm the o ok <2 4 b t the Senator was able jnge with which)they have been re- | [CPOrt s to the deplorable effects of n, Tuolumne County nourishment than for \':;ded. i Btneat Mintase i e the mere presence of the white man in - o | For the past two deys he d"ploma'cy ;“;‘_P Bden “h“ fl"_q' a sphinx | Alaska upen the destiny of the native Assi Paymaster | has talked very littie, and has made no | 5 "o 1 T s Eskimo, to say nothing of his unfortu- s B. Farwell to Feport | effort, as at first, to bring up'business | -°0 the 1atter a mystery to everything| ;.o ogigiation at the seat of gbvern- 5 < e g 2 and everybody in Washington. His P ola naval 1ing- sta- | matters. s ment. The officers say that the tribes tions. name is Minhui Cho, but it is doubtful stru T - Shystcians ach it & aki # - \\'a’lllllnfll x"l" ‘ldl‘ z ila;:zb“; Isl ey ?; i BECwENE VBN inush U yon zfl::s:vfll’?gs’flnd ?:;ll:tflsédu'z(;e "s:tn::)m:; he diss o run 1 i N %4 3 ve been « - asked him. His gray house is in w i | course, but that they are hopeful. The : gl DAt ceed 4000, chiefly by destitution result- ; is known as Iowa Circle, but no one | ; ¢ in continues good, and the s 5 2% ing from driving away the fish and b i} s &1 | the | hasses its portals. It is a somewhat | vl g1 Bt fact that the Senator is of a long-itved | Pttt M0 PUIL S (O B8 SCEENERY | game upon which they subsisted, and family is consldered in his favor. i especially by the game laws, which e | INCREASE OF CONSULAR | APPROPRIATION FAVORED | Senate Committee Recommends Blll‘ Increasing Diplomatic Corps Al- | lowance $77,300. WASHINGTON, Feb. 8 | | | } day” recommended the diplomatic and ! consular appropriation bill and Sena- tor Hale will call it up to-morrow. The committee recommends amend- ! ments carrying an aggregate increase | 300. The principal item of in- | is $30.000 for the erection of crenxted at Chinkaing and Hangchow, | dom, for many of its best have tried. ‘Whether the Minister is here as an of- ficial exponent of hermit life or wheth- er it is an individual characteristic with Minhui Cho, the diplomatit corps is unable to answer. o called ut the State Department the other day and Assistant Secretary The Sen- | Loomis saw him for the first time. No- | | ate Committee on Appropriations to- , body is certain as to what he said on | this occasion. He cannot speak English and his interpreter cannot interpret hine. This is perhaps the real reason of his seclusion. He is packing up pre- paratory to a return to his own coun- try and is soon to be succeeded by Y1 Kum Sang, at an uncertain date. It Will You Write a Postal prevent them from killing seals as they need them. Some remedy is demanded if the tribes are not to he wiped out. WOMAN WITH A CLAIM. Mres. Lena Walton of Nome is in the eity to prosecute a claim before the Su- preme Court for the ownership of claim No. 19, on Ophir Creek, Alaska, which she says is worth $1,000,000 and which is also claimed by and is in the posses- sion of Charles D. Lane and the Wild Goose Mining Company. Mrs. Walton says she is known' in the northern country as the Hetty Green of Alaska. She is stopping at the Raleigh and claims to have every confldence in the result of her suit here, although she ition building eoul, Korea. | | The Consuls at Lorenz Marques, South 1 DR. SHCOP’'S REMEDIES. was worsted by the courts of Alaska. Africa, and Tientsin, Chefu, Foo- | - e e e e chow and Hankow, China, are ad-| The recent arrest of Delegate Kal- vanced to be Consuls General, with in- | anianaole of Hawalli in a street row | crea: of salary. New consulates are and his being required to appear before a police court has revived the old ques- other people. | | China; at Montcon, N. B.; Port au : ticn as to how far the members of the | Prince, Hayti, and Turks Island. ! A two houses of Congress are immune sthered Oak. beautifully P T R | So a Sick One Hay Get Wcll? from arrest. The question is not be- with excellent French Plate Coal Te St. Louils Fai Send no money—simply Apostal eard. giving the ing discussed in Congress, to be sure, Don't let th o pa sts at St. Louis e * nRly Aposs iving the nama s pa s e Tad WASHINGTON, Feb. 8.—The House | “Thm witas v 1ahil areiap i orkjosend, | but in the newsphpers and the cloak everal other special offers ure that it will pay you to e = rooms. Delegate Kalanlanaole refused near him su<hat I to-day debated at length the proposedd Sat o Jewites. i shoen g vestigate A. B. SMITH CO. Furniture, Trunks. Leather Goods, Etc. 128-132 BLLIS 8T, Above Powell. S FRANCISCO. |to the urgent deficiency bill, and it was still pending when the House ad- | journed. - The House non-concurred in all other amendments except that pro- viding for coal tests at the St. Louis Fair. S N Senate Assists Portland Fair. WASHINGTON, Feb. 8.—After lis- tening to speeches by Hopkins and Clay in support of the Panama canal treaty, the Senate to-day passed the bill granting assistance to the proposed Lewis and Clark Exposition at Port- lland, Or. The bill was amended so as to close the exposition on Sundays and the provision for a permanent memorial to Lewis and Clark was eliminated. i —_———— A Guaranteed Cure for Piles. Itehing, Biind, Bleeding or Your druggist will refund me Cinument falls to cure you 1o 6 (0 14 days, Tooth Powder AN ELEGANT TOILET LUXURY ‘Used by people of refinement $or over a quarter of a century PREPARED BY \ Plles. Pazo S0e* orly way 1o induce all who need hely to accept it. Umake thiy offer to multiply mycures and | am wiil- ing 10 trust e cured anes 1o be (air wiih me n the past (3 years | have furnished my Restorative 10 hundreds of thousands of sick vnes on just those terms, and go out of 43 have taid indly. becaise tiey il Coay justas willingly whea une says 1 bave 2 ilec ! The remedy 13 my discovery. the result of a I{fetim work [ have perfected it by watching results in thoo. sands of the most Aifficult cases that physicians ever N:x 1 know what u[wnll do. v success comes (rom strengthenin Sy Restorasive 1 e only e organ is weak | by power which alone uperates every vital organ. 1t is like Riving a0 engine more sicam. | give the weak organ power 10 do its duty. and there 18 n other way to make 3 weak organ well Can you concelve of a sick one who will neglect such a treatment, whqn I take the entire risk? Addrers Dr, Shoop, x 8630, Racine, Wis. Mild cases, not chronic. are often cured with one or two bottles. At druggists.” Dr. Shoo—p:s Restorative Book 1 on Dyepepsia Book 4 for Women Book 2 on the Heart Bock 5 for Men (sealed) Book 3 on the Kidneys Book 6 on Rheumatism At the Doctor’s Risk k in: Ty ey hatcioes Restomtive. Her ke it @ month y risk. 0 loan of $4.800.000 0 the Loufeiana | ks the sonmi e " s wh deyt | to put up: the §6 Fequired as collataral, | Purchase Exposition &t St. Louls, as | /1 meaes iearacil show you what the remed e s o, provided for in the Senate amendment | 20 i niht eavestuay io convinee you. 1t 1t ihe | Coon his making the public clalm afterward before the court that he was, as a delegate to Congress, immune, the case ‘was dropped. . s e The mileage ‘discussion which occu- pied the House for several days and resulted in a unanimous vote to cut the paragraph out of the appropriation bill is expected to be revived in the Senate when the bill comes up there and many Democrats are hopeful that the Republican majority will reinsert it at that time, but' Republican Sen- ators are generally quoted as saying ““We'll fool ’'em"—or more dignified words to the same effect. The scene at the taking of the vote on the para- graph in the committee of the whole House was an exciting one—there be- ing a large attendance of the members, while the press and other galleries were crowded. The result was looked upon to count, one way or another, as political capital and the result, follow- CASTORIA The Kind You Have Always Bought i | i t | me do_ your veloping and printing. because 'l of quality that delights the put e fmse into the work, and because i G . - Hate - ower than these of othe AVegetable Preparationfor As— B e are s few figures: similating the Food andRegula— DRV e 5o ting the Stomachs and Bowels of Bears the ROl oF 1211101 1Be| Velox finiah.3e to e INFANTSWEHILDREN in stock films for all sizes of figures Promotes Digestion Cheerful- ness and Rest.Contains neither m. Morphine nor Mineral. OT NARCOTIC. 12 exposures. xposures, posures, proportion Filled. 4x31, 6 exposures, Other prices as Mail Orders THAT MAN PITTS i F. W. PITTS, the Stationer 1008 MARKET ST Promptly Use For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA e eareme e V| Preparing to Call on His Sweetheart a young man should be faultlessly ar- rayed as to outer garments, linen as well. We look out for the linen, as the smallest lot you leave to us to Jaunder will prove. When shall we call at your home? No saw edges. [ UNITED STATES LAUNDRY, OFFICE 1004 MARXET STREET. Near Powell Phone South 4320. ect Remedy for Conslipa- Tion, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea 1| Worms Convulsions Feverish- ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. A NEW YORK. Atburnonihs old 15 Dosis ']’)( LNLS e | EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. Brewer of the United States Supreme Court, to Wellington Wells of Boston was solemnized at St. John's Church, this city, by Bishop Saterlee. Pr dent and Mrs. Roosevelt and the mem- bers of the Supreme Court were among the distinguished guests at the wedding and at the breakfast which followed the church ceremony. e —_—————— — | At Springfield they are discussing President at Brewer Nuptials. the question whether a drum corps is a WASHINGTON, Feb. 8.—At noon | musical organization. When they come to-day the marriage of Miss Elizabeth | to a decision we will let you inow.— Brewer, youngest daughter of Justice | Boston Globe. ing the long discussion in which “the right to collect” had many champions, was a surprise. Like the recent attack upon the civil service which was de- feated in committee of the whole but sustained by the same votes when defi- nite action came to be taken in the House, no member was willing to face the record for such an unconscionable grab—not this year. Is the Most Necessary Magazine for Women Some of the March Contents that Interest Every Woman HER DRESS—A letter by Mrs. Osborn, the creator of styles for the smart set, leads off, supplemented by all of the sugges- tions of our own designers. HER CI:IILDREN—New Physical Culture for Children by M. Wilma Sullivan; Stories and Pastimes, by Albert Bigelow Paine, Gabrielle E. Jackson, Lina Beard, Emma C. Dowd; Children’s Reading, by Mrs. Theodore W. Birney. HER PERSONAL APPEARANCE—Dr. Murray's meth- od of acquiring beauty and health is simple, practical and healthful. HER HOME—House Building and Home Making, and Practical Aids in House Furnishing, by Alice M. Kellogg; Seasonable Gardening by Ward Macleod. HER TABLE—Suggestions for Serving and Waiting at Table on Informal Sunday Night Suppers and Impromptu Evening Refreshments, Something on Lenten Dishes, Novel Luncheon Recipes, The Cooking of Opysters, and many practical suggestions for bettering the table service. HER SOCIAL LIFE—The Evolution of a Club Woman by Agnes Surbridge; Club Life, Helen M. Winslow; The Observances of Society, Mrs. Learned; The Girl and her Interests, Priscilla Wakefield; Evening Entertainments. (Sl & N4 2 HER DISPOSITION—Lillie Hamilton French talks about *““dumping troubles” in The Joy of Living Papers. It will help one to the right outlook. HER LEISURE MOMENTS—Lionel Mapleson’s Descrip- tion of a Visit to Melba; a Story by Ethel Watts Mumford; A Prose Fancy by Richard Le Galliénne; Book Reviews by Laura B. Starr. This is the way in which the March DELINEATOR ministers unto the wants of women, her dress, her person, her table, her family, her home and her entire moral, mental and spiritual life. IT IS OUT TODAY. BE SURE TO GET IT. Of your newsdealer or any Butterick agent, or of the publishers, at 15 cents a copy; $1.00 a year THE BUTTERICK PUBLISHING COMPANY, Limited, 7 West Thirteenth Street, New York

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