The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, May 5, 1904, Page 2

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDA MAY 5, 190 'MORE THAN TWO THOUSAND SLAVS FALL IN BATTLE + HEAYY FIRING S HEARD OF GEASAN PORT! "Naval Battle Believed to Be in Progress in Sea “of Japan. ‘Russian“Cavalry on a Raid Down - Fastern - Coast of Korea. ———— Cabde 1o The Call and New York Her- Coppright. 1904, by the New York 31d Publishing Company, INSAN, Korea, Monday, via Seoul, Heavy firing has been heard to ‘ ard off here to-day and it is pre- naval battle is taking place. May §—The Japanese mer- hip Haginowia Maru, en- nsan to Fusan, is con- p Haginowia Maru, en- she has met with the e Kinshiu Maru. an reid down the east - reported yesterday. Five avairymen have passed ngsong, southbound. Kor- hat district .are welcoming nd repairing roads to facilitate nc P GIVES JAPAN DUE CREDIT. - Gérman Press No Longer Minimizes 3 the Yalu River Victory. 4.—The newspapers up their disposition e the Japanese victory on the observations of the followed by articles shasize the moral ef- IMAGINES THAT HE 18 PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT . Insane Politician, Formerly a Demo- crat, Assumes the Role of Chief Execitive. Mich., May 4.—Luke nent farmer and poli- is laboring under he is President of the he left home with- nation and when was making speeches on of Jackson, declaring him- Roosevelt. -His wife, des ring of his speechmaking at Jack- £l went thither to bring him home. « her arrival he started to Adrian, iere he repeated his speeches, re- # rharges against his supposed His wife followed him vd finally persuaded him home. He had walked more 160 miles since leaving home. The remarkable thing about the af- rnistratior Adrian 1 s that with his hallucination he - has changed his politics. Previous to “this tia 1e had been a member of the Demo tic County Committee and a leader of the party in_this section. —_—— MYSTERIOUS DISEASE CAUSES MANY DEATHS Children Are Victims of Aflment “Which Is Baffling New York. Physicians. IW YORK, May 4.—Seven chil- < t died within the last few . others are ill with a rious disease which is ravaging neighborhood of Madi- #0n @venue from One Hundred and Fifth to One Hundred and Eighth &tre ise,” said a physician this icks very young children In every case it begins with 1 lassitude. Then follow, fever, sometimes ns, unconseiousness many cases children within .six or eight hours oked. Very few have thas twenty-four ath, DR. PIERCE'S REMEDIES. Red i3 the color of or on the skin. When the face is reddened by eruptions, when bails bm{’ymn on the body, :é rfilc any red of sores a: icers is displa; in the flesh, it is m:’:‘ pronounces the Japanese | magnificent, while | 1 ‘General Kashtalinsky, in an Official ‘Report, Admits Enormous Losses. ST. PETERSBURG," May 4 — The| Emperor te-day redeived the following | Aispétch from Gené¢ral Kuropatkin: f _“Major General Kashtalinsky re‘; ports a&s follows: . | “ ‘I consider it my duty te report the circumstance of the, grievous battle fought by the troops under my com- mangd with the superior force$ of the| Japanese on-May 1. e e - *‘Early on the morning of April 30 the Japanese began to oppress our left flank, having on the previods evening occupied the Kosan Heights after an attack, in:consequence of which I ordered the Twenty-second Regiment, which” had eccupied Kosan, to’retire across the Aho Rfver to our-position at Potletinsky. “*On the morning of the same day an extraordinary, prolonged and vio- lent bombardment of our whole position at Kuliencheng commenced from Wiju. I foresaw that the Japanese, affer the bombardment, in which more than 2000 projectiles were discharged, would take ; the offensive. I received orders from Lieutenant General Zassulitch to ac- cept battle and to retain my position at Potietinsky. | My left flank was defended by two | battalions of the Twenty-second Regi- | ment_and the Third Battery of the | Sixth Brigade. FACE A WITHERING FIRE. “‘The Japanese took the offengive | at 5 o'clock in the morning, dispatching | at least one division of infantry, which, | advancing in column, sustained enor- mous losses,but crossed the ford and at- | tacked our position, which was exposed | to the fire of thirty-six fleld guns and siege batteries. ““The Japanese advanced and occu- pled the position. Toward mnoon 1! ascertained that the Japanese had routed the battalion of the Twenty- second Regiment posted at Chingow and were turning my left flank. “‘At 1 o'clock in the afternoon my left flank was reinforced by twe battal- | ions of the Eleventh Regiment and a | Battery commanded by - Lieutenant | Colonel Moravsky, which . were sent from the reserve by General Zassulitch | with orders to hold their ground until | the departure of the Ninth and Tenth | regiments from Sakhodza. -I ordered the Eleventh Regiment to occupy- a commanding position in the rear from which they could fire'on the enemy from two sides. i “‘I held Lieutenant Moravsky’'s bat- tery in reserve and ordered the Twelfth | Regiment, the Third Battery and the | gquickMiring guns to retire under cover | of the Eleventh Regiment. My chief | of staff led the rear guard to its posi- | tion. LOSES HALF OF HIS MEN, “‘At 1 o'clock the Japanese ap- | proached so closely to the position held | | by the Eleventh Regiment that the | | Third Battery could fiot pass along’ un- | der the crofs-fire and taking up a posi- {tion a short distance from the Japanese | It remained there until the end of the | fighting, losing its commander, ‘ Lieu- | tenant Colonel Moravsky. A company with quick-firing guns was brought up from the rear guard and the officer commanding this force, seeing the dif- ficult situation of Moravsky's batter: tock up a position on his own initiative. | He lost half of his men and all of his| horses and attempted to remove bhis guns by hand to the shelter of the hills | under the Japanese cross-fire. The quick-firing pieces discharged about 25000 bullets. . *“‘The Twelfth Regiment cut its way | through and saved its colors. | “‘The second battery of the Sixth Brigade, having attempted to rejoin the reserves by amother route, could | not ascend the mountain slopes, with only half its horses, and, returning to | | its original position, received the Jap- anese attack. ““The Eleventh Regiment, which held its ground for two hours more with heavy losses, forced a passage at the point of the bayonet and crossed the ravine with its colers. It lost its col- onel. * “‘We lost forty officers and about 2000 non-commissioned officers and men. The Japanese losses must have been enormous. “ “The Russians retired in good order on Fengwangcheng. ““Phe men of the Third Division mainteined their excellent morale and moere than 700 wounded proceeded with | their regiments to Fengwangcheng.'" —e ST. PETERSBURG STUNNED. ews of, Enormous Losses Arouses Grief in Russian Capital. ST. PETERSBURG, May 5 3:47 a. m.—The Russian losses at the battle of Kiulienchehg were 2000 men and forty officers—far greater than pre- viously reported. 4 This is the official estimate of Major General Kashtalinsky, who directly commanded the division that suffered the brunt of the attack and whose re- port was received yesterday by the Emperor. Many are inclined to place the Russlan losses even higher. Gen- eral Kashtalinsky mentions also that more than 700 wounded had arrived at Fengwangcheng and these may-not be included in his calculations. He made no attempt to estimate the Japanese losses, merely stating that they must have been colossal. The magnitude of the Russian losses had an almost stunning effect upon the authorities and aroused general grief, mitigated only by satisfaction at the bravery displayed by the Russian troops. Not for 2 moment was there any in- tention to pay such a terrible price for delaying the enemy's crossing of the Yalu. This fact was known throughout the city and gave risp to renewed re- ports, attributed to ?omclal sources, that General Kuropatkin had officially censured Lieutenant General Zassu- litch. If this was so, General Kuro- patkin's telegraphed criticism of Zas- sulitch was carefully cut out of the dispatches which have been published, and the generalfimpression now held is that he will remain in Manchuria. General Kashtalinsky’'s report estab- lishes the fact that the Russians sus- tained the greatest loss in order- to save the two regiments which were occupying Antung. = The Eleventh Regiment was given the post of honor at.the rear, with in- structions to hold back the oncoming Japanese. The Twelfth Regiment and the Third Battery's quick-firing de- tachment were directed to retire. By the time the latter movement commenced the Japanese had almost surrounded the .Russian position. The Twelfth Regiment was ¢ompelled to charge with the bayonet and succeed- ed in. breaking through the enemy’s lines. The Second Battery's quick-firing detachment, without horses, could not N move the guns and was compelled to | abandon them. The men of the Second Battery put their shoulders to the wheel§ in an effort to push the guns up the mountain side, but the Japanese fire was go hot that they returned to the protection of the Eleventh Regi- ment. Nearer and nearer approached the ‘Jahanese and a charge upon the Elev- enth Regiment and the Second Battery was imminent, so the guns were aban- doned. Then a priest led the troops and they began the terrible march across the valley. “Kuliencheng is history and we must now deal with impending events,” said an officer of the general staff to-day. The idea has prevailed that the Rus- sians would not make a stand at Feng- wangcheng, but the fact that a Japan- | ese occupation of that point would en- able a movement to _the southwes! thus cutting off the Liaotung penin- sula, which is taken into consideration by the authcrities, leads to the expec- | tation that General Kuropatkin dispatch strong reinforcements and make a determined stand. The activity of the Japanese, it is will there + Continued From Page 1, Column 6. time during the day, but none were re- ceived. The report which reached here from Europe that General Kuropatkin, the cémmander in chief of the Russian troops in the Far East, is personally leading 20,000 men from Liaoyang to Fengwangcheng is welcomed as good news, on the theory that the more ag- gressive the Russian campaign be- comes the more speedy will be Japan's final victory. X —_— ’ FIGHT LIKE CHINESE. Strategy of Russians Is Criticized by Japanese Experts. LONDON, May 5~—The Tokio cor- respondent of the Times sends ?:e fol- lowing: “The Japanese consider that Rus- sian strategy at the battle of the Yalu showed the same defect as that of the Chinese in 1894, namely, the lack of offensive initiative. y “Captain Arimi, who commanded in some attempts to blockade Port Ar- thur, in a lecture which he delivered here, said the Japanese, from ob- gervation, had accurate knowledge of Vice Admiral Makaroft's tactics, which enabled them to place the mines that destroyed the Petropaviovsk. The men of the entire Japanese squadron re- fraincd from the use of tobacco and wine on the day of the disaster—to show that they mourned the death of Makaroff. “No Japanese torpedo-boat or ‘tor- pedo boat destroyer has been obliged 10 return to the harbor for repairs since the beginning of the war. All have been repaired at seg.” o to Russia. PORT SAID, May 4.—The Peninsula ‘land Oriental steamship Osiris, nine hours out from Brindisi, was stopped, boarded and her mails examined by. the Russian warship Khrabry,- fired a blank shot across the Osiris" bow. The Russians detained the Osiris for two hours, searching the mails. They demanded the Japanese mails, ‘but these were at the bottom of the mass of postal matter and re- mained untouched. LONDON, May 4.—The Foreign Of- fice has no information in regard to ‘the searching of the Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigating Company's steamer Osiris by the Russian warship Khrabry after the Osiris left Brindisi recently for Port Said, but the press was informed that if the report were officially confirmed it was a most un- warranted proceeding and would ne- cessitate ‘a strong protest to the Rus- sian Government. v - e JAPANESE AMAZONS. Contractor Says Many Women Are in the Mikado’s Army. VICTORIA, B. C.,, May 4.—Richard Chester of Tanegashima Island; Japan, a contractor to the Japanese Govern- ment, is in this city, en route to the Orient. He states that at least 10 per cent of the Japanese soldiers ngw fn the field are women, disguised as men: He says that the average Japanese woman of the coolie class is as strong, if not stronger, than the man. Chester asserts that prior to last December Japan had landed 120,000 men in the vicinity of Pingyang; Korea, from which point they were quietly distributed through that coun- try. These men were all fully armed and prepared to keep the field for an indefinite period. e — f NEWCHWANG NOT cmtmm) British Newspaper Circulates False Report of Japanese Victory. . . NEW YORK, May 4.—The special telegram to the London Chronicle, ‘dated Chefu, asserting that the Jap- anese had taken Newchwang, was ob- viously false. Newchwang, which is on a river and about thirty miles from the sea, could not possibly be taken Lexcept as the result of an attack of at it remarked here,’fs not only north of the Yalu, from which there is constant scouting, but also off the Liaotung pen- insula, though the failure to seal Port Arthur may interfere with the opera- tions they had been expected to carry out on the west coast of that penin- sula. o About the bulletin boards the people were especially impressed with the des-: perate bayonet charge of the Eleventh, Regiment. . The mental picture of the regiment advancing against the enemy with bands playing and bugles blaring and a priest with cross aloft at its head appealed to the dramatic sense of the Russian population as nothihg else could. The survivors of this heroic regiment, which cut its way out,” de- clare that the position was surround- ed by more than 1000 dead Japaneése. The loss of the guns, which, accord- ing to the best information obtain- able, consisted of twenty-two field pieces and eight machine guns, is con- sidered particularly unfortunate, even though they will: be useless to the enemy on account of the removal of their breechlocks; but members of the general staff say the science of war offers many instances where guns have been sacrificed to allow infantry to re- treat in good order. - General Zassuliteh’s force is resting at Fengwangcheng. No renewal of the attack has been made. It is be- lieved that General Kuroki also is resting on the river. There is a strong Russian position back of Fengwangcheng, parallel with Mukden and. Liadbyang, where troops are concentrating, and it is considered likely that a really decisive engage- ment will be fought there. To force the pass beyond Fengwangcheng di- rectly is considered practically ilmpos- sible. General Zassulitch had . only forty guns altogether and sixteen of these left Antung early Sunday morning and reached Fengwangcheng safely. The second and third batteries of the Sixth Brigade lost all but two guns— namely, twenty-two. Eight machine guns which were used to cover the re- treat were lost. The Chinese Minister, who, having heard rumors of the possibility that | China might not remain neutral, ap- plied to Peking for information, has received a cablegram from the Pe- king Governmerit and Viceroy Yuan Shi Kai, which reads as follows: “In reply to your telegram of April 23 and with the object of putting a stop to unfounded rumors we request you to deny them, declaring again in the most formal manner that China and the Chinese people will faithfully observe neutrality. You are author- ized to say that the Chinese Govern- ment has given rigorous orders to the local authorities to see that neutrality is strictly maintained and that the | most complete order is preserved in the whole territory declared neutral. Moreover, we are able to guarantee that, owing to the measures we have faken, any renewal of events like those of 1900 is impossible.” United States Consul Greener at Viadivostok has sent the following telegram to the United States embassy regarding the treatment of the twen- ty-six Japanese officers and 184 men captured on board the steamships Kinshiu Maru, Nakamura Maru and Goyo Maru, sunk by Rear Admiral Yeszen’s squadron on April 25: “The survivors left here through a dense crowd, soldiers and sailors guarding the carriages of the officers, for Irkutsk, Siberia, on April 28. Along the route through the city there were no hostile demonstrations or expres- sions. The Russian military and naval authorities were courteously attentive. Food, tobacco and money were sup- plied to the prisoners for the journey. The Japanese were deeply grateful for their kind treatment.” Russia has agreed to recognize and afford every facility to the four Jap- anese Red Cross ships, Saiko Maru, Kobe Maru, Sakua Maru and Kosai Maru. v—- | Admiral Togo Succeeds in “Bottling” Port Arthur. — Associated Press has American cor- respondents at Chefu, Shanhaikwan, Newchwang and Yinkow, any of whom world certainly have reported an at- tack on Newchwan, e —— PORT ARTHUR’S RESPITE. No Fighting Since Togo's Attempt to Block the Channel. F ~ PORT ARTHUR, May 4.—There have been no developments since the attack on Port Arthur of May 3. Dur- ing the'Bombardment the big guns of the Russian ships and batteries fired 2500 shots, while the machine guns of the gunboat Giliak fired 3000 shots. The Novi Kral says it learns that the Russophobe Chinese, headed by Viceroy Yuan Shi Kai and General Ma, ‘are carrying on an active anti- Russian campaign apd that traveling orators are spreading false state- ments of the strength of the Japanese and of the magnitude of their victories and are telling malignant stories of Russian designs throughout the Chi- nese towns and villages, with the ob- ject of inciting the masses against Russia. i —_— . JAPAN BUYS OCEAN LINERS. North German Lioyd Company Sells | Eight Steamships. BERLIN, May 4.—The Vossische Zeitung says it Is informed that the North German Lloyd Steamship Com- pany has sold to the Japanese Gov- ernment eight steamships belonging to its East Asiatic lines, for war pur- poses. R A ‘To Resume Si Service. . SEATTLE, May 4.—F. K. Studley, local agent for the Nippon Yusen Kaisha, the Japanese royal steamship company, to-day received a cablegram from Yokohama saying that the line would resume its trans-Pacific ser- vice to Seattle the last week in May. This service was abandoned at the breaking out of the war, most of the company’s ships being taken by the Rmeu Government for transports. e company has now filled its fleet which “least two or three days’ dulntfmi The " with European vessels: e & KUROKI’S -ARMY AGAIN NEARING FOE'S POSITION Battle Will Be Fought Im- mediately Near Feng- d wangcheng. Pursuing Force Now With- in Eighteen Miles of Slav Main Base. v —— T.ONDON, May 5.—It is said the Jap- mnese have ‘advanced to within eigh- teen miles of Fengwangcheng and that another engagement is expected almost immediately. Major General Kashtalingky's insist- ence on the fact that he was. ordered to accept battle by Lieutenant General Zassulitch is interpreted as showing his 1 intention to throw -the responsibility | upon that officer for risking a fight | with his inferior forces and to confirm | the reports that General Zassulitch had been censured. Reports have been received Here that the Japanese captured a quantity of railroad material after Sunday's bat-: tle. This is supposed to indicate that ‘the Russians had made great progress | ‘with the railroad from the main Man- | churian line to the Yalu. If this is so it would be a simple matter for the | Japanese to repair this line, which would materially assist them in their advance through a difficult country. English correspondents with the Jap- | anese forces on the Yalu are permitted to send the most ample description§ of the people and the country travers- ed, but not a word about the fighting. The Standard’'s Tientsin correspond- ent says he is convinced that the Rus- stan positien in Southern Manchuria is | exceedingly weak, as a consequence of | the enormous number of men detached | to guard the railway and to obtain pro- visions. He believes that the forces| at Haicheng and Liaocheng are greatly | overestimated. The camps, he says, | are numerous, but there are few men | in them. There are several fortifica-| tions in the hills between Fengwang- | cheng and Halcheng, but the line of | communication is weak and straggling. ! Some reports current here state that | the Japanese loan will be $50,000,000 at | 6 per cent and will be issued simul-| taneously in London and New York. BANKER HAGAR | OF OAKLAND PASSES AWAY OAKLAND, May 4.—Edward C. Ha- gar, assistant cashier of the Oakland Bank of Savings, died at 4 o'clock this afternoon at his residence, 285 Fairmount avenue, after a month’s ill- ness from stomach trouble. The de- | ceased banker's condition did not be- come alarming until yesterday. Assistant Cashier Hagar had been with the Oakland Bank of Savings in | that capacity for sixteen years. He was 61 years old and a native of Mas- sachusetts. There survive his wife and two daughters, Louise Hagar and Mrs. A. W. Moore. Funeral services | will be held Friday morning at 10 o’clock at the Hagar residence. Pt ‘Well-Known Coloradan Dies. DENVER, May 4. — George W. Cramer, vice president of the Colo- rado Midland Railway Company; vice president of the Utah Fuel Company and president of the Globe Express Company, died here to-day of neu- ralgia of the heart. For a time Cramer has been in ill-health. Cramer leaves a widow and two daughters. PR ARy Sy Napa Loses an Old Resident. NAPA, May 4.—Mrs. Sarah Knapp, wife of the late Amos S. Knapp, died | in Napa this afternoon. She was one of the pioneers of this city, coming to California and Napa in 1858. She| was 88 years of age and had llved in | Napa forty-five years. She was born | in Bennington, Vt., and was married | in 1835. Mr. Knapp died six years| ago. L AR O S Death of a Cariboo Pioneer. VANCOUVER, B. C., May 4.—Sen- ator James Reid, a Cariboo pioneer of 1854, is dead. He was 64 years of | age and had been a member of Par- | liament since 1881. He accumulated a fortune by trading and mining. AR AR Pioneer Settler Passes Away. HANFORD, May 4—N. W. Moth- eral, a pioneer settler, Cumberland Presbyterian preacher and former member of the board of horticulture, died yesterday and was buried to-day. He was well known throughout the State. —_————— SALOONMAN IS DROWNED WHILE BATHING IN A TUB He Is Supposed to Have Been Stricken With Heart Failure Soon After Entering the Water. STOCKTON, May 4.—Samuel P. McErlane, a well-known saloon- keeper, was drowned in a barber-shop bathtub in this city this afternoon. He is supposed to have been stricken with Heart failure soon after entering the water. \ McErlane was a charter member of the Stockton Lodge of Elks and was to have been initiated into the lo- cal aerie of Eagles to-night. He was about 45 years of age and leaves a wife and tweo children. ———— Club Elects Officers. STANFORD UNIVERSITY, May 4. The Quadrangle Club, composed of men representing the various branches of college activities, has elected the following new members: A. L. Trowbridge, ’03, captain of the ‘varsity baseball team; B. C. Dey, edi- tor of the Daly Palo Alto; H. W. Bell, captain of the 1903 varsity track team; M. H. Thorpe, '05; A. M. Dib- ble, '05;. W. H. Lanagan, '05; A. Sherifts, '05; W. H. Dole, "05, l Right, in the Neck And shoulders--- right in style, fit and fabric---rights FITTING COLLAR in attracting the price. No won- der our Spring Suits and Overcoats are smart dressers. Every one gets more than he expects. EQUAL TO SWELL TAILORS’ GARMENTS AT JUST HALF THER PRICES. $14.00 to $30.00 BROWN % 516518 MARKET ST.nowicomeny LARGE COUGAR [ANGRY FATHER SPRINGS AT BOY| MAKES TROUBLE Oregon Youth Narrowly Es- capes Falling the Vietim of Hunger-Crazed Animal —_— Special Dispatch to The Call. COTTAGE GROVE, Or., May 4.— Trailing behind his father and re- luctant to go to school this morning, | Roy Damewood, the 9-year-old son of J. E. Damewood, a rancher of this county, nearly fell a victim to a fam- ished cougar. Damewood started on the seventeen-mile walk from his ranch on the Bohemia stage road to this place early this morning. His twe boys accompanied him, intending to go.as far as the schoolhouse, Roy brought up the rear on a trail through a bit of grown up clearing and his father turned to bid him hurry along. As he turned Damewood saw a large cougar crouched to spring. The man | rushed to his boy's rescue, shouting to Roy to run. The heast sprang for- ward but fell short, and before it could gather itself together the rancher kicked it vigorously, so vigor- ously, in fact, that the beast fled. Damewood then chased the cdugar into a tree and sent the boys home for his gun. A shot in the skull brought down a mere bag of bones, for the animal had evidently long lacked for a meal. ———————— Mansfield Cancels Engagements. KANSAS CITY, Mo., May 4.—Rich- ard Mansfleld to-day used the blue pencil on his spring tour in a whole- sale manner, reducing the number of his appearances in California to only fourteen and confining these to San Francisco. | was not easily def | #an thea started a sentinel like p Objeets to the Secret Mar- riage of His Daughter and Goes on the Warpath sl 2 The Cail Special Dispatch tc FRESNO, May 4.—For a long time C. J. Capps and Eunice L. Morgan had loved each other well, but the vigorous “No" of Papa Morgan had kept the wedding bells from chiming. But Cupid -ated, and last Mon- day evening the couple were married. To-day the father learned of the wed- ding and was filled with wrath. Arm- ing himself with a shotgun, he went to the house where Capps and his wife were living and invited the young man to “come out.” ‘Capps was wise and refused to accept the invitation. Mor- up and down in front of the house tiil Capps became frightened and tele- phoned to police headquarters. Officers went to the rescue and the bride and groom were for a time left alone in their married bliss. Capps said that he had before had trouble with Morgan, who had once stuck a revolver in his face and told him té stay away from the house or he would Kkill him. He | said to-night that he was going to have the irate father put under bonds keep the peace. —— et Ten-Year Sentence for Le Mar. BAKERSFIELD, May 4. — Judge Bennett this morning refused to grant a new trial to Charles H. Le Mar, who to was convicted of manslaughter, and passed a sentence of ten years’ im- prisonment at Folsom upon him. Le Mar shot and killed Thomas Delaney, a miner, at Mojave some months ago. ADVERTISEMENTS. Do You Want to Be “A Man Among Men”' ? Write To-Day. come and tell me how he feels, feit $1000 if I fail. quest of health. spending all they have spent Look at earn om all v rm fair’ Most of the Belts that I am sel dence that m: as on the dollar side. of a back trouble of 1 him of Indigestion, Constipation, he had suffered 15 years. town that I have cured. Just send out humanity. and I've got cures in ‘write to me and I'll do the same. MANHOO For Men Whe Have Lost It $1000 REWARD TO WEAK MEN Let any man who is weak, broken down, old and decrepit h weakness, full of pains and aches, gloomy, despondent a?\d <!'|he':r|’e‘si:E any man who wants to be stronger and youuger than he feels—let him nd if I say that I can cure him I will for- I don’t want money that I don’t eamn. after it. But I am after the dollars that are row have cured you if you will secure me, here that I can prove my claims to you, f‘“ you the names of men right ling no here by their friends whom I have c:red.' 530, men who have been sent business is a success from the standpoint of cures, as well Just lately I have received letters of praise . tl 3 James P. Daniels. 709 Devisadero strest, San Francioc o 2 years' standing. J. M. Gaskill, 220 Chestnut avenue, Santa Cruz, Cal., Nervousness and Lumbago, from which ‘Wherever you are, I think I ean me your address . is my twenty-fourth year in the business of PUmDING mew vim Inty Worn: nearly ev ey aa RS ot cures in nearly every town on the map. " - e scalon fres, 1f yog jhe same. Lve 80t a nice book on men that Ili Dr. M. C. McLaughlin, Office Hours—8 a. m. to 8 p. m. Sundays, 10 to 1. " Everybody Admires and Honors a Strong Man. I don't need it, and am not I have cured #a many ca. h but if that proof ls’ no:‘:n;‘:ll: near you—where you are. 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