The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, March 20, 1904, Page 22

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, MARCH 20, 1904. ;‘u‘{. A IJ.,MER s DO YOU GET SEWA P WITH A LAME BACK? Have You Rheumatism, Kidney,| Liver or Bladder Trouble 7P To Prove What SWAMP-ROOT the Great Kidney, Liver and Bladder Remedy, Will Do for YOU, All Gur Readers May Have a Sample Bottle Sent Free by Mail. Pain or dull ache in the back is un- mistakable evidence of kidney trouble. | It is nature’s timely warning to show | you that the track of health is not clear. If these danger signals are unheeded more serious results are sure to follow: ght's _discase, which is the worst form of trouble, may steal upon you The mild and the extraordinary effect | of the world-famous kidney and bladder remedy, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, is realized. It stands the highest for its wonderful cures of the most distress- ing cases. A trial will convince any nd you may have a sample bottle | Gentlemen—I _attribute my present £o0d health to Swamp-Root. I suffered many years with kidney trouble and had an almost constent pain in my back. Your great remedy, Swamp-Root, cured my trouble, and I have since been per- fectly well. Yours truly. B. K. CEALKER. ex-Chief of Police, Ozark, Ala. nly one symptom of many. Other i 1at you need| e bcm’v obliged to pass g the day and to get & the night, inabil- €, smarting or irri- brick-dust or sedi- catarrh of the blad- ant headache, dizzi- ervousness, lf’er\l' rheumatism. bloating, feeling. lack . sallow cc c acid, sleeplessness const plexion If your water when allowed to remain | i glass or bottle fo'\ ur hours forms a sedxment or | | n2tural help to Nature, | and severe cases. is endencc that your kidneys and blad- der need immediate attention. In taking Swamp-Root you afford for - Swamp- Root is the most perfect pzem]c aid to the kidneys that is known | to medical science. S\\mm Root is the great discovery of Dr. Kilmer, the eminent kidney and | bladder - specialist. Hospitals use it with wonderful success in both slight Doctors recommend it to their patients and use it in_their own families, because they recognize in Swamp-Root the greatest and most suc- cessful remedy for anv derangement of the kidneys, r and bladder. So is Swamp-Root in promptly curing even the most dis- cases, that to prove its won- ) vou may have a sample nd a book of valuable infor- . both sent absolutely free by contains many of the thousands of testi- 1 received from men and women The value and success of Swamp-Root is so well known that our readers are advised to send for a ie bottle. In writing to Dr. Kil- & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., be y that you read this gener- ffer in the San Francisco Sunday The proprietors of this paper rantee the genuineness of this of- essing you are already convinced that Swamp-Root is what you need, you can ase the regular fifty-cent and one- ar size bottles at drug stores every- where. Don’t make any mistake. but remember the name, Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the address, B gham on. N. Y.. on every bottle. l 1 { Don’t stand still— Improve your position. Read the HELP WANTS in THE CALL. L = - 3 CHICAGO, March 19.—Charged with embezziement, Francis B. Wright, | cashier of the First National Bank of Dundee, Ill., was indic to-day by the Fede Grand Ju He is al- leged to embe: d $54,000. As a result Wright's alleged embezzle- ment the Dundee Bank ciosed its doors on November Wright is safd to have become volved through | speculation on the Board of Trade. —_— % Within the last three-quarters of a century the wages paid to the laboring classes have risen in Spain only 15 per cent 52 cents a day. They now average 45 to GREENBERG & GREENBERG. GREENBERG & GREENBERG We Announce for Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday a Sale of 1904 Shirt Waist Suits. To start the spring seiling right we § make these great reductions just to crowd. this’ department and introduce to the public our new styles in Shirt Waists, Shirt Waist Suits and Outing Skirts for the coming season. Shirt Wais! Sults. Regular $3.75 Suits, special $2,75 Regular $4.00 Suits, special .3, 00 Regular $4.75 Suits, special $ 3,50 Regular $5.50 Suits, special $4.00 Regular $6.00 Suits, special $4.50 Regular $7.50 Suits, special $6,50 Regular $9.0) Suits, special $7.00 | There will be no better time to lay in { an eatire season’s supply of the above. I Greenberg & Greenherg 31, 33, 35 and 37 Grant Ave., Cor. Geary St. | full pardon | Pardons. SERVES TIME FOR A FRIEND Utah ]’mon Convicet Is Par- doned When ances Prove H Innocence Eectal Dispatch to The Call. SALT LAKE, March 19.—On evidence | proving conclusively that he was the | vicarious sacrifice for another™ crime, Wesley Thomas, a young man serving | a four-year sentence in the peniten- | tiary for burglary, has been granted a by ° the Friends of Thomas, without his con- i gent, dug up information which shows the charge against him in order that | the real culprit, his friend, might be | |saved. The latter, whose name is not given, was about to be married. Thomas was arrested on circumstan- | tial evidence. He knew the perpetrator of the burglary, but did not divuige | his information. Instead, he pleaded | guilty to the charge, although the evi- dence against him was very slight, con- | sieting mainly of the fact that a stolen watch was found in his possession. He | declined to account for the possession of the watch, hence the prosecution. RICE TRUST IS LATEST SCHEME OF CAPITALISTS | Millmen Plan Consolidation for the Purpose of Controlling Output of the Cereal. GALVESTON, March 19.—At a con- ference to-day at which &ll the mills in Texas and Louisiana were repre- sented plans were perfected through which & consolidation will occur for the buying, milling and selling of rice preduced in America. by The scheme is equivalent to a trust. There are several millions of dollars represented in the new organization, | which includes as its moving spirits John W. Gates of Chicago and A. Jahn of New York. Both of these parties are already heavily interested in rice ln Texas and Louisiana. Gates owns largest irrigated rice farm in Texas Jahn operates several mills in Texas, |\ Louisiara and other Southern Sates. Other local Northern and Eastern capitalists are also represented. The new company contemplates en- couraging both the production and consumption of rice, bejjeving that it ! can be most economically produced in healer and | Acquaint- | State Board :1‘ COMMENICATION AROUSES BEBEL | Socialist Member of the Reichstag Denounces Ger- man Campaign in Africa e QUOTES PUBLIC LETTER Says That After Easter He Will Demand an Explana-| tion From Colonial Office o Mg RS BERLIN, March 19.—In the Reich- | stag to-day Herr Bebel, the Socialist | | leader, referred to the German cam- | | palgn against the Hereros, which, he | | said, had taken on & character preju- idicilal to Germany's | honor, since all Hereros were killed | and no prisoners were taken. He re- | |ferred to a fetter from a veterinary | | surgeon, Dr. Baumgart, in the Lelpsic | | Neuste Nachrichten, asserting that no | |quarter was given and that every | black was shot down, Dr. Baumgart | himself boasting that, like a cannibal, he had massacred wounded men. | “Therein can be seen,” continued | Herr Bebel, “how far even our edu- | cated people are becoming brutalized. Let us not deceive ourselves with'the | belief that the present occurrences in Southwest Africa make a tdemoraliz- | ing impression only on the troops there. The descriptions sent must also | have a demoralizing and brutalizing | effect on the German people.” Herr Bebel did not deny that the | Hereros also perpetrated cruelties, but | he intimated that the reports on the subject sent to Germany were pur- interests and | | posely colored. at least partly untrue, “like the al- | leged murder of two women, who are still living.” QUOTES REPORT. “The reports of the Rhenish Mis- |sionary Society,” said Herr Bebel, show that things are by no means iaa bad as reported in the newspapers | friendly to the Colonial office. Those 'leports show that the Hereros spare | the whites who prove to be not Ger- mans, ltke the English, Boers and | Danes. It appears therefore that some of our countrymen have so ill- | treated the Hereros that they have | generated a fanatical prejudice against Germans in general. “Samuel Maharaero, Hereros, continues the missionary re- port, has given orders that no harm be done to non-Germans, missionaries, women or children, but that German | men be shot mercilessly down. They further report that the Hereros begged pardon of white women wounded by | stray shots in fights, saying they did | not wish to hurt defenseless women. | There i$ no word of truth in the as- sertion that the missionaries made | common cause with the Hereros. On the other hand, many Hereros took refuge in the missionary which apparently were . regarded as places of safety.. Herr Bebel also said the Soclalists of the Colonial Office on these mat- ters. ARENDT TAKES ISSUE. Dr. Arendt, Conservative, questioned the veracity of the writer of the let- ter Herr Bebel had mentioned. Pri- vate Jetters, Dr. Arendt added, are often filled with vain boasting. The House must wait until the rebellion is | subdued and then try to ascertain the facts. “At any rate,” Dr. Arendt continued, “all sides agree that the Hereros have | devastated, plundered and destroyed | |In a frightful manner. Our only con- cern now is to help our countrymen ‘ without mqulrlng into the cause of the rebellion.’ The supplementary credits for Southwest Africa were then voted and the House resumed the debate on the | military budget. The Reichstag then adjourned until April 12, —_—— Narrowly Escape Drowning. STANFORD UNIVERSITY, March 13.—While sailing in a canoe on Lake | | Lagunita, in the foothills back of the university, this evening W. H. Dole and G. E. Dole of Riverside were cap- sized and came near drowning. They | were in the unusually rough water for more than twenty minutes and were near the point of exhaustion from at- | tempting to swim to the shore when the rescuing party reached them. .[..__—__._—_q. ' South and that the middlemen | the | that the young man pleaded guilty to | Fe2lize too heavy profits. Rice kitchens will be established all over the United | States to introduce 300 different ways | in which the cereal can be prepared. | ADVERTISEMENTS. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Has won success far beyond the effect of advertising only. Its wonderful popularity is ex- plained by its unapproachable Merit. Based upon a prescription which cured people considered incurable, Hood’s Sarsaparilla Unites the best-known vegetable rem- | edies in such a way as to have cura- | tive power peculiar to itself. Its cures of scrofula, eczema, psori- | asis, and every kind of humor, as well as catarrh and rheumatism— prove Hood’s Sarsuparilla | the best blood purifier ever produced. Its cures of dyspepsia, loss of appe- tite and that tired feeling make it the greatest stomach tonic and strength- restorer the world lias ever known. Begin to take it TO-DAY. adway's R Pills Purely Vl‘.mlfilq mild and reliable. Causes e complete. absorption and Jehtu 'y n:ulcrl Y. NI' the cure of all dhnrfltrl of the Stomach, » Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder, les, Sick Headache, | | | | | | | | mb-llon. P\lu and all di Internal Viscera. 25c a_box. mail. RADWAY & CO., New York. | forced to retreat with a loss of seven | officers and nineteen men killed nndl | five wounded. The tales of horror | circulated by the German press were | chief of tl'AcI stations. | o mmerce HERERUS MAKE WICKED FIGHT In Battle Near Owilokororo Germans Lose Seven Of- cers and Nineteen Men WHITES 'FORCED BACK Glazenapp, the Commandant, Meets With an Unexpected Force and Has to Retreat BERLIN, March 19.—Colonel Leut- wein, the German Governor of South- west Africa, reports severe fighting there on March 18. The Germans were Commandant Glazenapp, with a number of his staff officers and thirty- six cavalrymen, advanced ahead of his main body and overtook the ene- my’'s vanguard, which had unexpect- edly received reinforcements. Glaze- napp was forced to retire, losing seven officers and nineteen privates killed and three officers and two privates wounded. The fight occurred on March 13, near Owllokororo, with the Tetjo tribe of Hereros, whom Glazenapp was pur- suing. The enemy’s loss is not known, but twenty dead natives were seen. Glazenapp's detachment had one machine gun. He is now taking meas- ures to attack the Hereros’ position in force, and probably will ask fot re- inforcements from Major Esteref's column. Colonel Leutwein 1later cabled the list of the dead, which names of Captain von Francis, Lieu- tenant Eggers and Dr. Velten, a physi- clan of Habicht. Glazenapp himself was slightly wounded. The news of the German reverse made a disappointing impression on Berlin, since it involved the most se- vere losses the Germans have yet re- ported, and because it was hoped that the worst was over. In view of this latest fight it is regarded as possible that further reinforcements will be sent to Southwest Africa. WORK ON CANAL sealed Send me the book checked above Bign here—— » Address——— To_Dr. Shoop, Box 7630, Racine, | Wi That is all. \you need. Sen DR. SHOOP'S REMEDIES. Cut This Out and Know How to Get, Well d no money. Simply sign above. Tell me I will arrange with a druggist near you for six bottles of the book Dr. Shoop’s Restorative Take it a month at my risk. If it succeeds the cost to you is $3.50. If it fails the druggist will bill the cost to me. And I leave the decision to you. included the |- Don't Wait Until Yo Are Worse ffering of this little one" el Rare beas prevented.” Her mothes wiites little_girl was ick con- m.fi.'y'fw".{f"" W wicd many doc- tors, fail mkmkn)‘ tiles o':my remain- “Tis & pity m d(d Ly mecn- "l dange: r ‘ .' 800 Bowe sick for 9, pri ronChico! La years ooul mfl the lum-:;. now the . "-“.:E‘" TR Bl Se ol et ooty Udark” years might have been :flfih mglu.-lq of Thomasville. Ga. for. three {otrs hasboed crippled with dissass. Now he s Tun' s for other wedicines, and. the ) 00 "' goeat with you have done'me more o mnmn. might have born #8128 thoso are aaly thrpe from ovar over 65,000 similar cases. These letters—-dozons of them— Sope e iy O e Betorative hos pr-mmd h-n no means of knowing, for the ill and the indisposed simply get a bot. tleor -ao( ghm druggist, ese cured, and never hear from ‘ones—seriously sick, mind sl "2'.“1?.5 e s R or® ‘uu —who id. d bec: he t we T vaa sucesed Tn saces 11ké these—fail bu one time in 40, in diseases tad and p-seat: ehmnir-hn‘k it cestain I can always cure the slightly ill? You may oft and rub, adjust and resalr 3 weak engine. It will never be stronger nor da its work better, without stemm. More power— more steam is necessary. And so with the vital organs. Doctor them as you will. That's mere repairing. Permanent cures never come save through treating the nerves that operate those organs. And that my Restorative does. After almost a lifetime of labor—of study at bedsides and research in hospitals—I made this discovery. 1 found a way to freat, not the or- gans themselves, but the nerves—the nerves—that operate these organs them power and strength ard heal discovery has shown me the way to cure. inside That It makes my offer possible. I know the remedy. 1 never can forget the study, all the research, the trial and tests that perfected it. I have watched its action year after year in cases difficult, discouraging. Time after time I have seen It bring back health to those poor ones whom hope had al- most deserted. I know what it wiil do. My only problem is to convince you. And so I make my offer. And the bare fact that I make such an offer ought of itself to convince you that I know how to cure. Pleasa read it again. It means exactly what I say No catch—no misleading phrases in it. Simply this—you take the medicine and I will take the risk. 1 And you—not I—decide if you are to pay. and give | All You Need to Do Simply sizn the above—that s all. Ask fow the book you need. The offer I make is broad | —is lberal. The way is sasy—is simpla. The Restorative is certatn. But do not misunderstand me. This {s not & free treatment, with nothing te pay. BSuch an offer would be misteading— would belittle the physiciam who made it. But I belleve in a sick one's honesty—his gratitude, That when he is cured he will pay the cost of the treatment—and gladly. T make this offer so that those who might Qoubt may learn at my risk Tell of it, please, to a friend who is sick. Op send me his name. That's but a trifle to ask— a minute's time—a postal. He is your friend, You can help him. My way may be his onlp way to get well 1. a stranger, offer to do all this. Won't you, his friend, his neighber, stmply write? He will learn from my book a way to ged Perhaps, as I say, the only way to get for him. His case may be serious—hopes s alm Other physiclans—other fale fsts may bave falled. The matter is urgent, then, Writs me a postal or sign above to-day. Address Dr. Shoap, Box 7630, Racime, Wia T0 BEGIN SOON s i | Walker Says Start Will Be| Made Shortly After the| Arrival of Commissioners TR WASHINGTON, March 18.—In con- cluding his hearing before the House Committee on Interstate and Foreign to-day, Admiral Walker, president of the Panama Canal Com- mission, stated that actual work on | the canal would be begun after the after Easter would demand an amswer | commission had made a stay of a few | weeks on the isthmus, for which it was to sail March 29, Admiral Walker, in answer to a ques- tion, said that a large number of in- spectors would be employed by the commission. These inspectors would be engineers and he did not want the law | to provide that they should be selected through the Civil Service Commission. “Admiral,” n{ld Chairman Hep- burn, “what you“have sald in diepar- agement of the Civil Service Commis- sion has been very painful to some members of the committee. Don't you think it would be possible for you to select what charwomen, scavengers and water-carriers you will need through the civil service?"” “I am very sorry to be misunder- stood,” replied the admiral, ‘‘because I am a thorough believer in the civil service when it does not apply to us. But I am very sure that it would not be satisfactory to the isthmus of Panama.” Admiral Walker explained that the estimate of cost of the canal made by the last commission did not include the expense of governing the canal zone. The engineering features of the work were explained at some length, as well as the intense interest which prospective contractors already are taking in the matter. The admiral said that on the steamer on which the commission was to sail staterooms had been engaged to the capacity of the ship by the agents of prospective contractors, who wanted to look the ground over. In this connection he advised that no requirement of law should make it necessary to do the work by contract, as he believed con- tractors might combine to the disad- vantage of the Government. It was the intention of the committee, he said, to continue actual work on the canal as now being carried®on by the French company in order to demon- strate the exact cost of such work. The engineering feat of the whole en- terprise was expected to be the con- struction of the Bhio dam. It will be necessary to go 120 feet below the sea level to get the proper foundation for the dam. Although there have been many borings for rock bottom, Ad- miral Walker said that many more would have to be made, because it was essential that the engineers should be absolutely certain of the proper foundation before beginning the work. The admiral said he had no doubt that it was feasiblé to construct the dam. On the question of a sea-level canal Admiral Walker declared posi- tively that in his opinion it never would be necessary to go to the ex- pense of constructing such a canal. A lock canal would do all the work required and cost much less. Representative Harrison explained to the committee the provisions of his bill for the government of the canal zone. This bill provides for a4 com- mission of twenty business men, the engineering work to be supervised by a corps of engineers. —_——— Indorse Roosevelt and Fairbanks. AUSTIN, Tex., March 19.—The Tenth Congressional District Republi- can convention to-day adopted a res- ‘e}; olution indorsing Roosevelt and Fair- en| tl nl-llAnmg h‘ m:: for the m.-bum national » | Iution: New Mexico Favors Statehood. LAS VEGAS, N. M; March 19.—The Republican Territorial Convention to- day indorsed the National and Territo rial administrations and passed reso- s\'fynvorlnz Statehood within the boundary lines of thelr own Territory. Delegates were elected and instructed for Roosevelt. Prairie Fire Kills Cattle. HEMINGFORD, Neb., March 19.— flercely and can be seen for twenty miles moving northeast of Alliance to- ward Lakeside. The Burlington Rail- way has lost much property. Many cattle and® horses have been killed. The range that has been burned will not recover for three years. The wind is dying down. —_——— Californians in New York. NEW YORK, March 13.—The fol- lowing Californians are in New York: From San Francisco—Miss Anspacher and P. Anspacher and wife, at the A prairie £-e south of here is burning | Holland, and A. Patterson, at the Ash- | Jacinto, land. - | the team. Stanford Chooses Debating Team. STANFORD UNIVERSITY, March 19.—The men who will represent Stan- ford in the twelfth annual intercol- legiate debate with the University of California were chosen at the final try-out held here to-night. The suc- | cessful contestants who will corpose | the team are Frank Roehr 04, San Joce, Howard M. Lewis '04; Great ‘Fall- Mont., and' Alexander Sheriffy | ‘05, San Jose. W. L. Blair '05, San was chosen as alternate of for the near as printer’s i do it—what our new 1904 Sack Suit looks like. actual suit itself. ing salient points: LONG, Homespuns and Worsteds; Blues and Blacks. PRICES KEARNY AF P Our New Sack Suit Spring of 1904 E SHOW you here—as @ No picture nor description can do it justice—you must see the @ Its superiority in tailoring is manifest to the most critical. call special attention to the follow- CLOSE-FITTING COLLAR NARROW LAPELS BROAD,CONCAVE SHOULDERS WELL-MODELED BACK STRAIGHT, SMOOTH FRONT @ Shown in Fancy Cheviots, From $10.00 to 535.00 ROOS BROS. ADVERTISEMENTS. nk can Spring We also in oY e i oSsT D —————— D —

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