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SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUN. AY, MARCH 13, 1904. DR. i.JILMER'S SWAMP-ROOT. THOUSANDS HAVE KIDNEY TROUBLE AND DONT KNOW 1T Il ' Y i LT To Prove what Swamp-Root, the Great Kidney Remedy, Will Do for YOU. Every Reader of “The Call” May Have a Sample Bottle Sent Free by Mail. o Wesak and unhealthy kidneys are responsible for more sickness end suffering than any other discasc—thercfore, when, through ncglect or other causcs, kidney trouble is permitted to continue, fatal results are surc to follow. Your other organs may need attention—but your kidneys most, because they do most and need attention first. If you are sick or *“fecl badly,” begin taking Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and bladder remedy, because se soon as your kidncys begin to get better they will help all the other organs to health. A trial will convince any one. mild and immediate effect of | brickdust or sediment in the urine. Root, the great kidney and | headache, backache, lame back. dizzi- edy, is soon realized. It |ness, sleeplessness, nervousness, heart highest for its wonderful fdtszzxrbnnce due to bad kidney trouble, distressing _cases. | skin eruptions from bad blood. neural- et your whole sys- | gia, rheumatism, diabetes, bloating, ir- best prwof of this | ritability, worn-out feeling, lack of am- i loss of flesh, sallow complexion, ght’s disease. If your water, when allowed to re- main undisturbed in a glass or bottle for twenty-four hours, forms a sediment or settling or has a cloudy appearance, it is svidenze that your kidneys and bladder need immediate attention. Swamp-Root is the great discovery of Dr. Kilmer, the eminent kidney and bladder specialist. Hospitals use it 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 { successful remedy. Swamp-Root is pleasant to take and is for sale at drug stores the world over in bottles of two sizes and two prices—fifty cents and one dollar. Re- member the name, Swamp-Root, Dr, Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the ad- ICHARDSON, mple bottle of this Swamp-Root, paid. by which s for such dis- and uric acid ion, being obliged ntly night and ation in passing. | bottle. NOTE. amp-Root in promptly essing cases of n liver or bladder trou- . erful merits you may have a sample bottle formation, both sent absolutely free by mail. The the thousands upon thousands of testimonial let- women c: d. The value and success of wn that o. aders are advised to send for a & vour address to Dr. Kilmer & €o.. Bingham- c 1o sav you read this generous offer in the San Fran- tor of this paper guarantees the genuineness SN QUENTIN SCANDAL, - — e Major Tompkins was the first Chief 1 of Police under the new charter, and served one term, when he was elected City Clerk, from which office he deposed about three years ago. g U, Continued From Page 21, Column 1. s of San in, an active factor in PRISON, FUNDS ARE LOW. Oakla He came to that city N S twen g0 from New York, | Jute Mill in Straits Owing to Over- and > in the service of stock of Grain Bags. SAN RAFAEL, March 12.—The State Board of Prison Directors met in ex- ecutive session to-day to consider the depleted condition of the prison fund According to the report of the prison officials the San the In 1886 he was elect- and Superintendent blican ticket, | 2 those offices for several the new Oakland charter was there was a political upheaval Quentin jute mill is . party was formed.|Short over $65.000. This deficit is the Tomplkins received the nomination for | TeSult of the large output of grain bags, City Treasurer from the new organiza- | LP® POOT crops and the consequent non- tion, but resigned in favor of the Re- | d€livery of grain bags. The output of publican candidate, Z. T. Gilpin. ; the jute mill is over 18,000 bags per day == Over 6,000,000 bags were made last year Of this number not half were taken from the warehouse, although ordered and 10 per cent deposit was paid there- on. There were 1,329,620 bags ordered, | and there is yet 859, 25 due the State for them. At the present time there | are 3,903,500 bags on hand and no money to run the mill. The question was brought before the | State Board of Examiners at a recent meeting. and to-day at the special ses- GREENBERG & GREEN3ERG NEW BUTTONS A MORE RARE AND MORE BEAUTIFUL ASSORTMENT OF STYLES AND PAT- TERNS IN NEW | tick, secretary of the examiners, noti- | fied the board that an appropriation of mill going until the bags could be sold. be so0ld outside of the State. Many of- | fers have been made by outsiders to purchase bags, but to no avail. To-day, | however, owing to the present emer- igency. Warden Tompkins was author- | ized to dispose of 50,000 bags at 5% | cents each. This number will be shipped to Honolulu. LACES, NEW TRIMMINGS AND NEW BUTTONS WERE NEVER DE- ADVERTISEMENTS. @ R * o S SIGNED IN ANy | * “w;:y“' et rid PREVIOUS SEASON | * || tions is to cleanse the blood, » || improve the digestion, stim- GREENBERG & GREENBER 31, 33, 35 AND 37 GRANT AVE. COR. BEARY ST. dress Binghamton, N. Y., on every| sion of the Prison Directors E. 8. Mel- | 0,000 would be authorized to keep the| The law requires that no bags shall | To Western clvilization, lnculqsted into the minds of the Japanese since the memorable landing of Commodore Perry on the shores of the emplire, Baron Kaneka, now at the Palace Hotel, attributes the remarkable ad- vancement of his nation as a power in | the Far East. “To your Perry,” sald the distin- guished Japanese diplomat yesterday, | “we owe a debt of gratitude that can never bsrepald unless by acts that will show to the world, and particularly the United States, that we, the Japanese people as a whole, have fully merited all the benefits that Commodore Perry’'s expedition to the Orient gave us, and that we have not only appreciated them, but have materially profited by them. It is just fifty years ago that he touched at Japan, and in those fifty | years our nation has undergone a most wonderful transformation. It was he that sowed the first seed of Western clvilization in our land, and from that | stant energy and ambition, a nation | which is to-day dolng what England, | France, Turkey and other great pow- ers long hesitated over—making a de- flant stand against the Russlan empire. These facts I mention simply In clear- ing away any doubt as to whether Ja- | pan in its hour of trouble fully merlts | the sympathy of all civilized nations, jand none more so than the United States. We are not fighting simply for the sake of war, but for the protection 10{ our country’'s Integrity and the homes of our people—in other words, fighting is our last recourse. It is the culmination of failures to obtain satis- factory settlements by peaceful means | of existing differences, dating back to last year, when Russia made and later violated her promise to withdraw frém her position in the territory which she had unwarrantably invaded. AMERICAN FEELING CHANGES. ““When one carefully glances at the | possessions of Russia and then directs ‘hls attention to those apparently in- | significant islands off the Asiatic coast, { he naturally wonders at the temerity | of the Japanese empire and probably lserlously weighs the responsibilities | that she has assumed, without credit- |ing her with the strengthening influ- ences that are the foundation of her present stand against the Czar and his | mighty domain. These influences are | nothing more than the beneficial re- | sults of her progress under the West- {ern civilization imparted to her with Elhe advent of Commodore Perry. | “I have been deeply impressed by {the turn of American opinion regard- | ing Japan since the present war began. | Prior to the outbreak of hostilities we | heard much in our country about the | fll-feeling entertained in yout Western | country against our people in conse- | quence of Japanese immigration. On | my previous trips to the United States I found this feeling very strong and | frequently our Minister in Washintgon has reported to the Foreign Office that | the Japanese immigration in the West was becoming almoXt too large for one man to contend with. | severed her relations with Russia and war was declared and then came the in sympathy with us. The very peo- ple who were decrving us a few | months ago have now shown us their | sincere friendship. And why? Be- | cause they have readily realized that we are practically the ‘under dog' in | what promises to be a terrible strug- gle. This trait is one of the sweetest in American manhood and one that the Japanese fully appreciate. | GIFT FROM UNCLE SAM. “And why. 1 will ask" vou again, should not this feeling exist? With- out Perry, Japan would not have re- | ceived the blessedness of° Western | civilization. With that aid we have been able to follow you' in advancing our nation to a position among the | powers. America is an example that is ever before the Japanese eye. All Ministers coming to this country have recefved their instructions regarding the relations between the United States and Japan. which, during the last fifty vears, have changed only for the better. The fruit of our civiliza- | tion was reached with the influence of | America. Our power with other na- | tions is a gift from America and with that power we are now fighting | Russia. ; “If the American people will only look back into our history a few years | they will readily find the origin of | many influences. The educational de- | partment of Japan was established by | an American, Dr. Murray; the Post- office Department was organized by |an American named Bryant; an American established our -telegraph 'e and an American named Craw- ford was the adviser of our Govern- ment in recrganizing the province of Hokkaido. which lies adjacent to the Siberian boundary. In fact, In every | department of our Government there are Americans. Large numbers of them are in our schools and coljeges. We have sent many young men and women—mere boys and girls, in fact— to this country, where they have been educated in your principal Institu- | tions of learning, and returned to | Japan to accept responsible positions in the Government offices. PATRIOTISM OF JAPANESE. “So you see agaimne the fruit of Perry’s introduction of Western civili- zation. To-day this Influence perme- ates every class of society in the em- pire. Then, again, the Americans were the first to send their missionaries to Japan, where they were given a warm welcome and every possible freedom, which resulted in the constitutional enactment granting freedom of con- science and religion to all subjects of the Mikado. “Other reasons that may be cited in support of my contention that American sympathy in the present trouble should be bestowed upon our people are these facts: Baron Ko- mura, Minister of Foreign Affairs, who has been handling the Russian- | seed has developed, with the aid of con- | Manchuria and hurriedly strengthened | map of the Far East, surveys the vast | Suddenly Japan | news that the Americans were deeply | {Japanese questions in such a delicate | manner, is a graduate of Harvard College, and Minister Kurino at St. Petersburg also fs a graduate of the same Institution. Going a little far- ther down the line of notable charac- ters on our side of the war, we dis- cover another graduate of one of your foremost colleges in the person of the commander of the Japanese fleet off Port Arthur, under whose direction the first gun of the hostilities was fired. Men with the learning of those that I have just mentioned are not ! likely to make many mistakes in the management of the war. “In every way Japan has followed American ideas and methods and we are as near the type of American as could be expected of an Orlental race. To be sure, our color is yellow and our stature unlike that of the Ameri- cans, but our minds and hearts are Just the same. While studying in your colleges the men who are now ! handling many of the important de- tails of this war read of Bunker Hill |and they have seen Valley Forge, where the immortal Washington and his soldlers, poorly clad and fed in midwinter, defended their homes with | their payonets. The same feeling that buoyed the hopes of those gallant | soldlers exists with the Japanese to- day. WHAT FAILURE MEANS. “If ‘we should fail in this war I am afraid the faith of our people in Amer- fca would cease. We are a unit in the opinion that we are right in this strug- gle. From the highest in the land, the Emperor, to the lowliest of his subjects, the poor coolie, from the aged to the child, there is but one trend of feeling, and that is that right is on our side, that we must fight on and on until jus- tice is done us. We are fighting for principle and are governing ourselves by international law. We have resorted | to no barbarian methods of warfare, and none will be permitted. There have been from time to time stories pub- lished of alleged barbarities practiced by our military forces, but none of them have ever been confirmed, and 1| am satisfied that they are untrue. Rus- | sla’s methods of warfare, notwithstand- ing her boasted claims, were exempli- | fled several days ago, when, after a | Japanese major and a squad of soldiers | had fallen into the hands of her troops, they were marched through the streets | of Mukden for the edification of a lot | of Russians and Chinese and deeply humiliated. Where was the humanity | that Russia had been boasting of? Was that Christianity? Was it a principle ot the Greek orthodox church, or was it a relic of barbarism? Now contrast the treatment accorded the Russian sailors by the Japanese when the former were | rescued from the sinking ships after; the bombardment off Chemulpo. Our navy men, after enforcing the custom- ary oath from the prisoners that they would not return to the fighting lines for service, escorted them to the near- | est shore, where they were released | without molestation. 1 | GOVERNED BY HUMANITY. | “We do not know just how the war will end, but so long as it lasts the world will find Japan striving | within the bounds of international law | and humanity. The world, by the| way, has not yet stopped to consider | what the outcome of this war may mean. We believe that weq are fight- fng for the peace of Asia, and, conse- GIVES AMERICA ALL OF THE CREDIT FOR THE RAPID PROGRESS OF JAPAN Baron Kaneka Says the Island Empire Is Patierning After Our Ideals in Its Strides Toward Civilization. | quently, the peace of the world. It s a test of civilization, in as we are concerned, for we should fall our people, as I have already sald, may lose faith in Western civilization, and neces- sarily, in America. A defeat may also change the views of other less civilized peoples of the Orient, who would ac- cept our downfall as evidence of the fallure of the very methods which we have been following for fifty years and would refuse to encourage the further progress of civilization in their own countries. “The hue and cry that has béen raised in several quarters concerning the so-called ‘yellow peril' seems to me as ridiculous as a statement I read in one of your papers the other day, and which, I believe, was accredited to one of your statesmen, to the ef- fect that Japan eventually meant to gobble up Korea and then take thé! Philippines. You may rest assured that if Japan defeats Russfa she will make no attempt to acquire any ad- ditional islands, for she has all she can do to control those she now pos- sesses and she never has given a thought to the possibility of some day | owning the Philippines. As for any ‘vellow peril'—that is, a combination with China, with the ultimate view of extending her power across the Pa- clfic—I will say that we, as a nation, are rapidly progressing toward Chris- tianity and any alliance with China of the character that has been suggested would never meet with the gpproval of the Japancse people. PEACE IN THF. EMPIRE. “A strange feature of this war 1Is the peaceful conditions existing in the cities and towns of Japan. While great armies are mobilizing at varfous joints and our navies are keeping our ports busy, the Japanesé merchant and the artisan are performing their daily duties in their customary manner, as if the country were at peace with the Our Government has | not permitted its war preparations to whole world. interfere in any way with its commer- cial industries, and while the entire country's future is at stake the chil- dren are pursuing their studies in the schools as usual and the colleges are | preparing young men for positions of | responsibility. While our forces are battling with our great enemy on one | gide of the Pacific Ocean our commis- sioners are quietly engaged on this side | preparing for the St. Louis Exposition, the biggest showing Japan has ever made to the outside world of its com- mercial enterprises.” Baron Kaneka leaves for the East to-day. He goes first to Chicago, where he will be joined by the Jap- anese commissioner to the St. Louis Expositlon, with whom he will have a long conference, and he will then pro- | ceed on to New York. + PRSI SR, MARRIED COUPLE FOUND PEAD IN THEIR ROOMS Police Believe the Husband Commit- ted Suicide After Having Taken the Life of His Wife. NEW YORK, March 12.—Robert Gray, a painter, and his wife were found in their apartments here to-day, the woman with her skull crushed in and her husband in the bathroom, hav- ing apparently committed suicide by gas asphyxiation. The case is supposed to be one of murder and suicide. DR. SHOOP’S Book § on Dyspepsia Book 2 on fiz ;lzplrl Book 3 on the Kidneys Book 4 for Women Book 5for Men (sealed) Book 6 on Rheumaiism Send me the book checked above Sign bere——— . Address— To Dr Shoop Box €630, Racine, Wis. Simply Sign This Get Well. That {s all. need. T will arrange with a druggis: Take it & month at my risk. If it s fafls the druggist will bill the costt Don't Wait Until You Are Worse Taken 1n time. the suffering of this little ome would have been prevented Her mother writes me “Two years ago my lttle girl was axck com tinvously for six manths W tried many doce they ailed. yet 1 100k oniy two botiles of your remedy (o cure her, ai remain c3gured Vou can tell otiersof this cure if you sodesire Mrs C H_Avery, Rockdale N V.* Tis a pity she did not hrst write me. before the case was dangerous . The wife of Omer Anarus of Bayos Chicot. La. had been 3ick lor 10 years +or 8 years could do practically no work ~ He writes “When she firsi started taking the Restora. tive she barcly weighed oo pounds now she | peight 115, and s able casily 1o do oll her H housewurk. . » l"ma‘ “dark” years might have been I J G Billingsley of Thomdsville, Ga, for has been cripoled with disease Now he i writes *1 spent $50 oo for other medicines. and_the 00 1 have spent with vou have done me more o monty ard safcing s tave bt imved. money and suf might have been sa And these are only three from over b5.000 simila cases These letters—dotens of them—come every day 10 me How much serious illness the Restorative vented. | have no means of knowing for. the. lfi_ -Mm:m:l:nn‘uuay"t. bottle o1 two of druggin, red, and | never hear from t Hut of 600.000 sick ones—senously sick, mind you— who asked lor my guarantee. 30 out of each sohave paid. they got well ume cer. ht* ones. years He L well “|.|'! :n“l:«cd‘;nm like ll;ue—hil but L 8 ases chronic—isn S Can almays cort e shghly S ‘Wty The i S R R T GESRE, 1 e T ko T S And Gt sy Restorative does Know How to Send no money. Simply sign above. e e, REMEDIES. so far 1t | ADVERTISEMENTS. TO ALL AND SINGULAR The Men of San Francisco GREETING PRING is upon us! When Nature puts on her brightest it behooves mankind to apparel follow suit. Our buyers have gathered many novel and distinctive styles-—forecasts of the season’s popular fancies--—-and they’re all here for your accommo- dation. While our patterns are all abso- lutely new, we wish especially to commend to your notice a new line of goods we have taken on this season. We invite special attention to their most excellent TAILORING which can only be compared to the very best grade ot custom work. This 1s moments of your time will convince no fanciful boast---a few you of that when you see The Close-Fitting Collar The Long, Narrow Lapels The Broad, Concave Shoulders The Well-Modeled Back The Straight, Smooth Front { i | | | that hangs withouteither fold orwrinkle ROOS BROS. KEARNY AT PFPOSTE OCEAN TRAVEL. S o o Steamers leave Broadway wharves, Plers 9 and 11, San Franeisco. For Ketchikan, Wrangel, Juneau, Haines, v etc., Alaska—11 a. m., ¥, Mar. and Tell me the book you t near you for six bottles of Dr. Shoop’s Restorative ucceeds the cost to you is $5.50. If it 0 me. And I leave the decision to vou. Alter almost a litetime ot labor - of study at bedsides and research in hospials—1 made this discovery. | found 3 way ta the theat. not the organs themselves. but erves—the insidcs nerves—that operate these or- and give d power and sirength «nd health ai o the way 10 cure . liscovery Ffll shown Tt makes my offer possil 1 know the remedy | never ean farget the study alt the research, the inals and resty~ahat perfecied u | have wmiched itg deiion year fter yeae incases 4«1{:::. tscouraging Tume afie. ms | have seen it bring Bach heg thio thoe poo; ures whom hose nad 2imes deserted | know what it will do My nly problem is 10 convinee you And so | make oft, And the bage iact that | ke such an offer ought of Heell 1o conyince you that Tknow how 1o cure *—Please read 1t again (v meam exactly what | say No catch—no misleading phrases it Simaly thit—you take the medicine and | il tal hod vod-—not | —deade it vou are 10 pay All You Need To Do he above—that is all_ Ask lor the book P Io;ci' I:‘ke:" i liberl” The Wy W easy—s simple. estoranve is cenain 1 do not misunderstand me This is mlsm treagment. with noth: an offer would be misleading—wouls clan ke Or wend Ll <an help him me his name t's but » trifle 10 ask—a Il Brape, - anger, offer 1o do Tell of it please. 10 3 friehd who is sick ki e s do el "he friend. his nehbor. simply write! 'on't you. hir 1l Pes R b b~ ey TR T is urgent, then Wite'me 2 postal or sign avové 1o-day. Address Dr. Shoop, Box 6630, Racine, Wis. Perfect Fitting Eyeglasses At Moderate Gost . Apr. 3 to company's steamers at Seattle. For Victort Vi | Port Townsend. Seattle, T.:om-..’l\«e::'r!‘.’“;;: lingham—11 &, m., Mar, 1, 6, 11, 16, 38, 31 Apr. 5. Change at Seattie to this company steamers for Alaska and G. N. Ry.; at Seattls or Tacoma to N. P. Ry.; at Vancouver to C. 1 6 11, 8 | ¥._Ry. | For Eureka (Humboldt Bay)—Pomons, 1: 0.5 Near 135, 2B Ave. 4 Spokane, | 1:80 p. m.. M S 14, 20 26 Apr 1. 3 | JFor Los Angeles (via Port Los Angeles and Redondc), San Diego and Santa Barbara—San- ta Rosa, Sundays, 9 a&. m. 3 32 | ;«-n of California, Thuredays. 9 a. m. 642 "MARKET ST |50 Azivies s San_ Pearo"and ase terey, San Simeon, Cayucos, P Harford Luts ‘Obispo). Ventura and Huenema. o o Ct 2 Coos Ba: m., Mar, 8, AT WEAK MEN| §5.0% %™ el b o DR. HALL'S REINVIGORATOR | For Ensenada, Masdalena Bay, San jose del stops all loszes and unpatural dis- | Cabo, Mazatlan, Altata, La Paz, Santa: o charges In 24 bours. You feel an |salfa. Guaymas (Mex.). 10 a. m.. Ttn- ench PP ave oo mich confidence 18 sur Ve have so muci < L] (LI s tmenc tnat we offer Five Mun- | dred reward for any case we ca ot cure. This secret remedy cure New Montgom- TICKET OFFICES—4 ery st. (Palace Hm!. 10 Market st. and Broad- | Jost. ywer, nightly emissions, wasted organs, . colnie icet, atrictures, ' kidneys, fatling | Vo ;",;‘I?Q'AN ght office, 10 Market s, memory, drains in the urine, gonorrhoea, dis- * D DUNANN, Geseral Gor Aguat, | ease of the prostate glands and all other terri- arket San Francisea. The Pactfic Transfer Co., call for and check residences. ble effects of self-abuse or excesses, which lead on to consumption and death. Positively cures | the worst cases In old or young of that morti- | tying condition, quickness of the discharge, and { wanting to do, and you can‘t. Sent sealed, §2 | per bottle, three bottles, $3. Guaranteed to cure any case. ‘ Call_or address orders HALL'S MEDICAL 8§55 _Broad Oakla: 20 Sutter st., will baggage from hotels Telephone Exchangs 312 o0 O. R. & N. co. INSTITUTE, way. Cal | OREGON safls March 18, 28, Wieo for sals at 1073% Market st. 5. F. Sead | May 7 and 17 GEO. W Bt DEE s % for free book. 13, 23. Aoril 2. 12 22. May 2 and 12 | Oniy eteamship line to PORTLAND, OR. rail line from Portland to all points East rough _tickets to all points. Steamer tickets include berth and meais. Steamer sallg oot of Soear st. at 11 a. .m. BOO Gen. Azt L. . and short FOR BARBERS, BA- kers, bootblacks, bath- BRUSHE houses, billtard tabies, bookbinders, candy makers, cannees, brewers, Dept.. | Mongomery ndries, paper- | & s dy flour mills, foundries. lau . CLIFFORD, Gen. Agent Freigh ers, inters. shoe ‘actories | LT e P R s isaen RS, wte.. | Mestgnmey ot BUCHANAN DRC & Bruss Manutacturers. 00 sucrsmmnto 3% | CCRRICS, S, €O, Foems oo ore i € e — oty quinad — 1 L - B S £ MARIPOSA, for Tahiti, Mch. Schoois and Colleges. |3 & DR L s uen s, gl » land and Sydney, Thur.. March 24. 2 p. or S. ALAMEDA, for Honolulu, Apr. 2, 11 am EALDS e LEADING BUSINESS COLLEGE OF THE WEST, 24 Poet st, San Francisco, Cal Oven ontln\y-r. . from Pler North River, foot of Morton st First el to Havre, 'fl:.l‘nd upward, See- FRISBIE or MONTICELLO— d 8:30 p. m., except Sunday. 30 p. m. Leave Vallejo 30 and 6 p. m.. ex. Sunday. Sun- p. m. Fare, 50 cents Tel. 508, Pjer 2, Mission-st. dock. HATCH