The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, March 27, 1904, Page 23

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, MARCH 27, 1904 DE. SHOOP'S REMEDIES Vil YOU HELP A SICK FRIEND ? Get My Book for Him Kow. iy know of some eae who i3 sick—some sufferer who will Dbe p my book offers. S of a way to help, Tellsof a 50 gertaln that I, as & on trial. The bBook tells how for 30 years in hospitals ed for a way to cure deep-seated and difficult diseases. my preseription—Dr. Shoop's Restorative. How by I traced out the ocauses that Lring on chronic diseases. that where thers was a weakness, the inside nerves were ere was a lack of vitality, the vital nerves lacked power. Whare Te found I always found week nerves. Not the nerves com= but the vital organs’ nerves. The inside—the iavisible is was a revelation. Thea my real success began. Then I combined in- n hat would sf that would vitalize, these nerves. n I called a restorative. It is known the world over now as orative. After that I did mot fail %o cure one case in each hun- ely difficult cases my fallyres for five years wers one in I found cancer incurable. Cancer is for surgery, not this prescription to sick ones sverywhere was my thought. n the public press. But, thought I, will they realize the iscovery, the real power of Dr. Shoop’s Restorative? Then ke a piration. “I will offer it to the sick on trial 1 cere—that my prescription is unusual.” each city and village in America. They by any sick one, Dr. Shoop's Restorative 11 month I will let you use it entirely at write me for the book you need. When I send it I will by who will permit the month's trial. Use tha Re- If you say to the druggist “It di not help expense whatever. He will bill the cost to your mind of all doubt as to what Dr. Shoop’s cannot dispute this absolute security I offer. if you ere at all sick. If you have a weak- ngs like you used to do them, tell me abwut b: clan I will tell you a way to help. to-day. Address Dr. Shoop, Box 1630, Racine, Wis. hronie, are often cured by one or two bottles. At druggists’. UNION - SOUTHERN PACIFIC You reach posits in anticipation of withdrawals for the Panama canal payment. The required reserve of 25 per cent cash against all deposits was increased through the gain in this item by $2,.- 913,700, deducting which from the in- crease in cash leaves $158.300, the INVENTS MOTOR THAT C Frenchman Devises a Craft That Is Wonderful in Iis Adapta- bility. PARIS, March 26.—The first motor lifeboat ever built in France has just been launched at Port La Rochelle and is how the subject of no end of discus- | sion among sallors. The boat is pro- | pelled by a twelve-horse-power engine, | in which petroleum is used for fuel, and | ; 'Trading Centers Again in|New High Records for De- Unfon Pacific Shares and| posits and for Loans Are Price Is Slowly Advanced! ZIstablished During Week e A s NS| NEW 'YORK, March 26.—The Fi- CONSTANT R‘EACTIONS,mnc!er says: The striking features ' | of the official statement of the New 2. York Associated Banks this week 3A°hv"0 in the Iron and were new high records for deposits | try vivi and for loans, the latter passing the i Steel Indus Revives | billion-dollar mark. The Government Under Favorable B.eports | deposits were the highest of the year. | | The cash gain of the banks was $3,- | | 072,000, or 3$796,5600 above the in- | NEW YORK, March 36.—To-day's ! crease as -nzat:d from ‘;.ne’ uafhe. tock market Was a small affair and | able movements of ‘money during the s v sy el ““m n Union Pa. | Week. The depogits were augmented < $11,654,800, 2 new high record, which cific. That stock fuctuated over | amount is only $362,100 less than the | range of slightly more then & point| gym for gain in cash and the increase | above last night's level, with constant | in Joans; therefore, the statement | reactions, and ended the day with an | showed a good balanceRw It is note- advance of 3%. The suggestion that | worthy that, compared with the pre- the manner of distributing the North- | vious week, the public deposits in. | ern Securities assets should be submit- | creased by $5,459,400, reflecting the | ted to judicial decision had an unset- | concentration of these deposits in the titng influence upon the markat in spite | Specially designated banks; the in- arious assurances and intima- | crease in this item since February sources that 6 has been 39,054,800, indicating the i s no danger of hostilities be- tween the great forces concerned in the | settlement. Some excitement was | | caused all through t#b Stock Exchange hborhood owing to a dangerous fire r at hand on Broadway. The smoke pervaded the halls and offices of the | great buildings surrounding it. Atten- | {tion was thus diverted and the trad- | ing was languid. A reaction before th Computed on the basls (:t the de- bank statement carried prices back to | posits less those of $45,948,100 public the neighborhood of last night’'s level | funds, the surplus is $38,9 00. The and there was an indifferent rally after | loans were expanded by ,944,900, its publication. The closing was duil | carrying the total of this item $7,863,- |and heavy. Total sales of bonds, | 700 above the billion-dollar mark. | $600,000. | This increase in loans most likely re= | > plan for the distribution of the | flacted the present sum at call of pub- Northern Securitiés holdings of North- | lic depusits, which had been concen- | ern Pacific and Great Northern was | trated in the banks during the week. the occasion of an excited speculation | on two days of the week. The anima- and strength of the market in | days was almost as great as on the days when the plan of the | Northern Seeurities organization began to eme into pubiic knowledge. These effects from the dissolution of a cor- oration from which such great results were entertained and whose formula- d stimulated such an abundant ues occasioned some perplex- which has not been relieved by thing thus far coming to the public knowledge. OFFIC rise in ity ALS MAKE DENIALS. | extent of the augmentation of the de- | galin in surplus reserve to $27,468,875. | ADVERTISEMINTS. WOMEN " &7 COLDS Colds Invariably Result in Catarrh, Which Sets Up a Host of Distressing Diseases { 7S\ | {\ | /o 4 i Miss . G 'nmae‘stefibmgf \‘Pe-ru-na Both Protects and | Cures a Cold--Read Proof. | { in an ordinary sea is credited with a | Miss Gertrude Stebbing, Room 203, 2§ | speed of twenty-five miles an hour. | Lasalle St., Chicago, Ill., writes: | The lines of the boat are like those of “About a half a year ago I contracted The transactions on Tuesday of more than 409,000 shares of Union Pa- Chicago . ar St. Louis smoothly, serenely without fret or jar in SPECIAL PARTIES TO THE EXPOSITION Call or send postal to S. F. BOOTH, General Agent, U. P. R. R. 1 Montgomery St., San Francisco days or any Southern Pacific Agent Many Prince March ge of the at Cannes. —Not since Duchess the Alexandrine ars ago have there ces here. There are :nt no fewer than twent ties, of whom eight are im- and twenty royal ns was entertained Robert Goelet on rd and Lady ateau Leono ADVIRTISEMENTS. % e e, " HAVE YOU SYMPTOMS OF DISEASED KIDNEYS? If So, Read How Electro-Chemistry Cures Serious Kidney Affections, in Which No Medical Treatment Has the Least Curative Effecti. i Moo Sk RIO VISTA, Cual, March 23, 1904. . ot IAI:”.J! kidn, My cass w something e Electro- dition was ng the Elec o my heavy work at WIILIAM J. DONNELLY, Care Steamer own, “Rio Vista, Cal"” Electro Chemistry cures serions kidn - culating freshly oxygenized blood to the dxmm l"m'”i. whick nas the effect to stop the cellular degemeration that causes the breaking down of the kidney structure. *Electro Chemistry cures advanced cases, in which no medical treatment can vossibly achieve any curative result. To all sufferers, or to any ome kidney trouble, we extend a cordial invitation to come to us for a thorough kidney examination free of charze. In these cases it is well Tning urine for analysis. should appeal strongly to all persons who n2in or uneasiness in the back. To those who have noticed unnatural dewflt.l‘:‘n the have to get up at night to nm:o the bladder; to those who have spots bef Po! efore the eyes, dizzi- ness and he .. : A FREE TRIAL TREATMENT. b - To demonstrate how Electro-Chemistry cures seemingly & | curable cases, we will giv Ticant eatment atso | of charge. One treatment will® demonstrate. (o oo eabiend to the patient's atment cures. the diseased kidneys hing the least objec- satisfaction why th will Gemonstrate how Electr: e Electro-Chemic Treatment Head Noises, Rieumatism, =eun.1—u. i erv Detiis, | Blidier Trouvtes. CONSULTATION AND EXAMINATION FREE. PATIENTS TREATED SUCCESSFULLY AT HOME. sme Treatment is the most perfect ever devised and employed. Suf- tance from San Franeisco and unabie to visit the Institute are afforded ful treatment as those who are treated in its offices. Gome paratus and appliances loaned to patients taking home treat. d. Write full description of your case. Diagnosis, advice and hemic specialists free of charge. All correspondence strictly ed in plain envelopes. confie THE ELECTRO-CHEMIC INSTITUTE, " 2™ Oftce Hours: Daily, § &.m. to 5 p. m., and 7 £o 8 p. m.; Sundays, 10 a. m.to1 Separate Apartments for Ladies and Gentlemen klenburg and Prince Christian | my back | 5 | 2 most reasonable | of more than 8 in hange. 1l street wa nd Great Northern inter- | curing a sufficient holding ! the history The favorite hypo-s in Union Pac tage proportior fic | | influe in these two companies and | was doing this with the assent of the | olling interests in Union Pacific hange of director- | the us companies and | shment thus of a community of | which would effect the same than the s | The large ! of Union Pacific stocks brought om sources associated with the during the activity of ti corroboration of this view. On the | d official denials were made | or of any buying of | Northern Pacific and Northern interests. The tem activity in the market was | rgely congested in stocks waich were supposed to be available for the com munity ' of interests under the new he < of stocks showed 1 eir comparative inter- movement. " WHEAT ADVAN ggard movement in PRIC o our steel trade, although the trade had general sentiment. the Southw fluence wa advance for was especially reports from upon h So adid the rains tern wheat | somewhat | u prices of road reported better. Foreign | advanced to the gold . but the continued inflow of | Japanese gold is an offset. Money rates have f in time loa | are at a pointm encourages hold- | of dividend paying railroad stocks present prices. Railroad bonds related to the Jorthern Securities merger shared in temporary activity of the stocks. | he bond market was generally ir- | nited States.2's, old 4's and new | 4's registered advanced % and new 4's coupon % per cent on call during the | week. ——————— ICI.AID(S DEMOCRACY IS WANING IN AMERICA | | | | | | | French Writer Says This Country Is | Inoculated With “Virns of Napoleonism.” | PARIS, March 26.—The Rappel, a| { French Radical organ, has taken note |of a recent announcement in a New | York newspaper that some American city s making plans for the erecting | of a statue of Napoleon. A long edi- torial is devoted to what is termed the evident decadence of the true spirit ot democracy on the other side of the At- lant::. The burden of the editorial s that America has been inoculated with the virus of “Napoleonism.” The writer | goes on to say that it is quite apparent that Americans have not had their fill | of monarchs and that some of them are | aching for a chance to set up 4 throne {and crown a King. This spirit of aristocracy is attributed | to the intoxication of conquest and an insatiable thirst for other worlds, to conquer. The writer then registers a solemn warning to all Americans to turn back before it is too late to remedy the evil. The editorial declares that a statue | to Napoleon in the public park of any | town in America would be an insult to every republic in the world and odious to every believer in national liberty as opposed to despotism. The writer | warns the people of the United States ; against “‘the poison of Napoleonism."” “France is still suffering from the victories, defeats and national ruin wrought by Napoleon,” he continues. “Americans can only be counseled to regard as enemies of their country all those who aim to glorify arms and con- quests. It can only mean ultimate bloodshed and national decadence. “The ercction of a statue in memory of the tyrant Napoleon means nothing less than the ‘riumph of the enemies of liberty.” ————— France and England each own in v.m, | Africa an area as large as the United | 1008 Btates, £ = that North- | an incident- which finds | & racer and it is equipped with alr-tight | @ severe cold which settled in my system of the |compartments that the builders say | ;“’1 finally developed into catarrh of the | will keep it afloat in the heaviest seas. Part of the boat’s equipment consists of a lot of new life belts. These have just been invented and the initial ex- ly superior to the oldtime life beits, | made of sections of cork sewed in can- | vas bags. The new belt consists of a broad sash in which there are four air. tight pockets. It has been tested sev- eral times in the last month and every case has given the best results. Men wearing the beits jumped into the water head first, but - invariabiy came to the surface head at the top accepted by the bull party | and remained thus without the least| movement of the body. Experts say the bueyancy of the new belt is suffi- clent to keep any one above water for many days. R GHOSTS TERRORIZE DISTRICTS IN VUVLSTER - | Imaginary Snooks Do Queer Things and Cause a General | Sensation DUBLIN, March 26.—Two districts in United | Ulster are in a stite of great excite-| ment owing to supposed superna-| tural visitations. In the house of a farmer named a cheering influence | Thompson, who lives near Carrickmore, | County Tyrone, some extraordinary happenings are alleged to have oc-| curred. - | nights ston_s and bricks sils have disappeared from the dairy, | though the door has been locked and | strict watch has been kept both by the Thompson family and their neigh- bors. In a district called Quilca, in County Cavan, unearthly noises heard at night for weeks past have reduced the in- habitants to a state of terror. —— e It you will try to climb to the top of | the ladder be careful not to tumble off | or make yourself ridiculous. DR. PIERCE’'S REMEDIES. “Go Wesl, Ranch it and getfido(that o e d to a and child to care 'r::gih it and 'l soon chest and that hack- That is what the doctor married man with a wife rled through the windows | and churns, milk pans and other uten- | No one| will stir out after dark. } | also receive annual incomes for life. Mr. Smith asked his trust company how he | could best make these provisions for | tract offered him the best way for cagry- | head, which was very troublesome. | “I had frequent headaches, my eyes | smarted and head was stopped up so | that L felt dull and stupid all the time. | “I had known of so many people who | had used Peruna and been benefited that I was sure that it would do me good and =0 I bought a couple of bottles and used | them. T became better right along and before I had finished the fourth bottle I was cured. | “I am pleased to recommend your i medictne for I consider it very good."— | Gertrude Stebbing. There 1S no fact of medical science | better established than that a teaspoon- | ful of Peruna before each meal during the winter season will absolutely protect a person from catching cold. Now if ‘l this is true (and there is no doubt of it), thousands of lives would be saved, and tens of thousands of cases of chroniec ca- tarrh prevented. by this stmpie precau- tion within reach of every one. After a cold has been contracted a tea- spoonful of Peruna every hour will shortly cure it, leaving no trace of it be- hind. After chronic catarrh has become | esta { shed. or the first stages of chronie | bronehitis or consumption have | reached, it will take much longer to ef- fect a cure. It seems strange that as well known and well established as these facts are that anyone should neglect to profit by { them, and yet no doubt there are many who pay little or no attention to them, and g0~ on catching cold, acquiring itis and consump- chronie catarrh, bronc tion. Cora H. 1., Redmond. 906 W. Monroe Secretary | Financial stant buzzing and a ull feeling in the ear. It was noying and was also af- | fecting my hea . I had tried 2 num- ! ber of doctors and had taken a great | deal of medicine, but nothing seemed to | { help me until 1’ began to take Peruna, | land then I noticed an improvement at | ence, and this went on until complete re- cov I am very grateful to, Peruna and_cannot say too much for it."—Cora H. Redmond. If you do not derive prompt and satis- | factory results frof the use of Peruna, write at once to Hartman, giving a full statement of case and he will FIRM BELIEVER IN LIFE INSURANCE Eben Smith’s Investment With the Mutual Life In- surance Co. Exceeds All Previous Records. NEW YORK, March 26.—The largest sum ever paid an insurafice company by an individual has been deposited with the Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York by Eben Smith of Denver, Col., who has placed in the companys hands over $663.000. Under the terms of his contract Mr. Smith receives an annual income for life, and at his death his son end daughter and his six grandchildren, in addition to large cash payments, will himself and for his entire family, and was advised that the Mutual Life Con- ing out his plans. He directs attenfion in“the following letter to the fact that the fluctuations in the value of other se- been | Mi ildred eller; Miss Mildred Keller, 718 13th St ““I can safely recommend Peruna for catarrh of the throat. had it for years and it would respond to no kind of treatment, cr if it did, it was only temporary the trouble would come back. be pleased to give you his valuable ad- vice grat AUTHOR MUST PAY DAMAGES London Jury Decides That Captain de Keyser Was Libeled in Burrows’ Book LONDON, March 26.—While mission- aries were petitioning President Roose- velt and Secretary Hay at Washington yesterday to intervene on behalf of the natives of the Congo Free State, Cap- tain Henri de Keyser, a former officer of the Congo Free State, was sping Cap- tain Guy Burrows in an English court for libel in connection with the alleged atrocities. Captain Burrows on his re- turn from the Congo, January 2, 1903, published a book in which he charges Captain de Keyser with committing nu- merous atrocities on natives, shooting them, cutting off their hands and oth- erwise mutilating them. The case has been on trial for two days and resuli in a verdict in favor of Captaidf™de Keyser, who was awarded $2500 dam- curities which he holds impress him with the stable character of his investment in the Mutual Life. NEW YORK, March 1, 1904. The Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York: tual Life Insurance Company of New York $662,022 28, @n amount which I un- derstand to be the largest sum ever in- vested by an individual with an insur- ance company. The deposits I made during four years until the -T gate reached the total named. and_this best, investment ever devised. The depreciation in other securities which I hold has strengthened my belief in life insurance in a company like the utual Life. The annual income which am receiving and shall continue to re- ceive from the Mutual Life as long as I live, protected as it is by over four hun- dred and one million dollars, relieves me from anxiety regarding my own future, and the life income which my contract guarantees to my son and daughter and my six grandchildren in the event of my death relieves me of all concern ages. sln the course of his evidence Captain de Keyser not only swore that he him- self was guiltless, but gave a denial of similar charges current against the Dear Sirs: I have invested in the Mu- | Congo Free State officials generally. The defendant presented no evidence in support of the charges. The other suits against Captain Bur- rows, brought by Captains Chaltin and Duriecuick, both Congo officials, whom Burrows charged with disemboweling policy reflected my | infants, etc., were settled in court, Bur- growing belief in life insurance as one of | rows agreeing to pay each of the plain- the if not the very best, forms of | tiffs $250 damages. —_— future material welfare. I am glad to say that this investment in the Mutual Life is probably the best one that I have ever made. EBEN SMITH. ‘When a politician blowpipe you can never be quite sure N.w | was in such a state that my friends were alarmed about me, and | was adwised to l/save this climate. Then I tried Peruna, and to my great joy found it heiped me from the first dose | took, and a few bottles cured me. constitution, | regained my appetite, and I feel that | am perfectly well and strong.”’—Mildred Keller. limbers up his: . Washington, D. C., writes: ! Hartman, President of The ‘olumbus, O. / and on_the shghtest provocation It built up my Address Dr. Hartman Sanitari When a man sets popularity befors his eyes he is likely to let principle out of his heart. ADVERTISEMENTS. / Double Size MATTRESS] Guaranteed to be made of pure Java Silk Floss. The acme of comfort—smooth and elastic. Superior in every way to Curled This is iden- Hair Mattresses. tically the kind of mattress usu- ally sold for $10.00 to $12.00. We sell on liberal cash or credit systems. Call early and get ome of the above Mattresses. We've other good things to offer also. A. B. SMITH CO. 128-132 ZLLIS STREET, Above Powell. , SBAN FRANCISCO. Schilling’s Best are not ex- travagant; quite the contrary. Teas and coffees good-enough; baking-powd-~ flavoring ex- tracts and spices pure and best and yet economical; soda com- whether it's a megaphone on a jag, or| mon, for their | just a plain gas explosion. —

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