The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, June 12, 1904, Page 37

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE SAN FRANCISCO- CALL. SU AY, JU JEF OFFICERS WORK ON NEW THEORY |- — Now Believe That the Cook Suspected of Killing Min- ing Expert Is Also Dead 'CHAMPIONSHI MYSTERY GETS DEEPER| | Team Rented by Valentine and Companion Returned Stable by Stranger £t R LI AKERSFIELD, June 1l.—Evidencs t tending to show thal xander Pontan, the hunchback ook ¢ murdering John A. Valen- Los Angeles mining man who dead in Kelso Canyon, has murdered. No trace of | been found, but a third whom nothing 1 gave the name of Val- ve into Mojave and eam that Valentine had The stranger paid for its xhibiting more than $300 in gol to been hes Pontan regarding whe | 1 | | | Valentine's Sheriff Promotion of Enlisted Men. servi rendered ssions in the War was fitness for | var service is | | equaled by any | | n or marking that time of peace. The cations of an officer under war conditions is by | | mmi Civil of the qua ped the question of probable ef- | | es no definite standard. In| | d rs of military pro- | requirements for | th sfiicer much more ex- | that there al have twelve ap- to the comm navy, so lo rtage of grad P BATTLE WILL PROBABLY BE HELD — A | WL was won to-night by Schaefer by commission | | twelve points. The winner ran out P his thirties, it] | ! | with a break of sixtv-three. He re- | had been done that | | oo ol y % e —% | ceived a tremendous ovation. ! ad been done that | [ ryy GoOD NATURED CHALLENGER FOR THE WORLD'S BOXING CHAMPION- - pro- 1 SHIP AS HE LOOKS ON ?’;‘E:S x‘::‘:u\p;‘: xY,‘\':\'T i\;lr‘\\;rfllbr Aty TENANCE = T r th be SHOWS THE EFFECTS Ol ARD BOXING HE HAS DONE. | S ~Sgpru Lonltad [ s +|COMMERCIAL NEW ie restriction of : o re 3 y g & T b oF Boilermaker Will Resume|Jack Munroe Works Out for Continued From Page 41. d a b Work To-Day at Harbin Springs Quarters. By F. E. Mulholland. HARBIN SPRINGS, June 1lL—After night of extreme vigilance on the part his trainers and attendants, | seethinz hot medicinal applications be- i y two hours, Jim Jef- awoke from cat-like naps this g to find his knee in a vastly improved condition. The poffy, angry-looking swelling had been visibly uced, and while the leg did not present its normal apgear- ance, the results were encouraffing. The champion was feeling in exu! ant ake a com- t or could not | present restrictions. promotion within of Shipbuilding in 1903. shed | ing applied eve fries mor statistics of ng. the number spirits. Jeff saild he would continge to E rest to-day, but announced thatt he would be at work again on Sunday. anager Billy Delaney did not quite pprove of this, but entered no protest. Once his inind 1s made up to do a thing, v en agrredet o :h', nothing can alter the big boller- els of 44 maker’s determination. [ = is little or no chance of. the we Ky ot s hip contest, set for next Fri- being postponed. In fact, has wired friends to that the T\ in Irelar es o8 Hotand’ and in- effect and by »nd doubt Jim and Jack Forth, the Mersey. tha | Will shuke hands in the ring as sched- 1glish Char In the | Wed | Rusets | No serious results can be anticipated | » 'Ausi,_‘): | from the lay off whatever. Six weeks | Sebak, < D Belgium | Of training have transformed the beety | e Cloie " Becien looking champion into a well-chiseled | ' o serious as expected, athlete. His face plainly shows the re-| record vear New York Com.|sult of this labor by the firm, hard-set 3 expression when in repose, and there| 5 [ was more danger from overdoing than | Wil ing | from neglecting his training. While | Tt S | resting on his oars Jeff will indulge Pt + ey rim- | o oringly In food, and a relaxation of % gym and road functions for two or even ™ Sou vt F8S three days should prove beneficlal, and » ir blue china reputat not_harmful. i ey Seur. L ¥ S | gam Berger, the husky Olympic Club | rushes when women make | ;1 otcur boxer, came down from Har slaught on a counter of shim|,., gyrings yesterday. Sam will par-| aists! Are any of the virtues—the | ;i ,c in the boxing tournamen:t at| gentleness, the lendernces, the Sym-| g ' ouis next September, and thought O e weak and meedy —for | ; journey to the springs might ripen Bt of s e l"‘"‘;{”:; | and strengthen the gelatine muscles. older, feebler, poorer and more in i Lawyers Want Big Fees. Philip J. Cunningham, on an as- is a brutal struggle to get the |signed claim from the law firm of X says Everybody’s Magazine, “in | Boyd & Fifield, commenced suit in vhich the feeble are trampled under the Superior Court yesterday against foot, gowns are torn and hazsv‘lh(‘ San Francisco Gas and Electric smashed; a struggle in which women | Company for the recovery of $30,000 of stature and grip do not hesitate | alleged to be due for legal services to snatch a bargain out of the hands ! performed between the years 1890 and need of bargains than herself? Nay, of another woman and bear it off in|1900. William H. Fifield of the firm is triurfph. In the peculiar creed of dead. It is alleged that the services ethics that governs woman's conduct | were performed for the defendant toward her sister woman, it is con- | company and its predecessor, the San sidered perfectly legitimate to covet | Francisco Gas Light Company, in the your neighbor’s garments, or her cook, | examination of titles to real property and to get them away from her if you |and in defending the suit of George can."—New York Commercial. C. Bates and the suit for the partition | —_—————————— of the North Peter Smith tract. Fertility of Mr. Tapley's Chin. I —————————— Besides being the home of Champ, The cost of hauling & ton of freight Clark, Pike County glories in the dis- | 2 mile on Great Britain’s greatest rail- | tinction of having in its midst the most . way is 1.45 cents; on_the Pennsyl- luxuriant crop of whiskers in the|Vvania, .40, and on the New York Cen- B THE McWILLIAMS SPECIAL. the Edification of Man- ager Pollock. | near Newecastle, to R. FRIES' INJURED KNEE IS IMPROVING CYCLIST RINS ~ INTO SENATO Cockrell of Missouri Badly Injured by a Reeck- less Washington Youth COLLAR BONE IS BROKED |Lad Responsible for the Ae- cident Quickly Remounts Wheel and Disappears WASHINGTON, June 11.—Senator F. M. Cockrell of Missouri was run into by a boy riding a bicycle to-day and thrown violently to the ground. His right collarbone was broken, his left side badly bruised and he was other- wise injured. The accldent occurred early this morning, but| was not made | known until to-nfght. ° | As was his custom, Senator Cockrell | went to do the marketing for his house- hold, and was returning home when the basket on his Arm was run into. The boy was riding at a rapid pace. He quickly remounted his wheel and dis- appeared. It was said to-night that the Senator was resting comifortably, but that he would be confined to his bed for several weeks. —_—————— Guardiola Estate Sale. A return of sale was filed in the Su- perior Court yesterday by the admin- istrator of the estate of Jose Guardi- ola, showing the disposal at auction of the following properties: At Cali- fornia and Sansome streets, to A. J. Rich, for $249,000; on Ellis street, near Stockton, to W. F. Perkins and Joseph M. Masten, for $315,000; on Pine street, near Battery,*to A. J. Rich, for $57,000; on O'Farrell street, near Mason, to A. Aronson, for $76,000; on Bagley place, near O'Far- rell street, to Joseph E. K Bier, for $36,000; lots ‘on the Heredia estate, . Fuller, for $5500. The commission of 1 per cent to the sales agents amounts to $7385. —_— “Jake” Schaefcr Defeats Cure. PARIS, June 1.—The billiard match between Schaefer and Cure at 3000 points, 19-inch balkline, two shots in, California Stockand Oil Exchange —_— 0il Stock— Apollo .. Manager Harry Pollock saw his pro- 4} t b tege, Jack Munroe, work out yesterday | cCaiirc rnig Standard . 213 00 Caribou L350 afternocn and was delighted with the form displayed by the burly miner. At that he did not see him at his best | | Chicago Cr as Jack went swimming in Sutro Baths | | 22;4 In the morning with his retinue of |In 18 00 trainers and this left him languid. | pacPendence . Added to this he missed his usual half- | hour nap after luncheon, as there were | visitors to entertain, The gymnasium was crowded to the gave the big miner a fast workout and | tried their best to sneak in a hard | blow. Munro 's sore nose was skinned again and gave him a rather gory ap- |4 pearance. Munroe's fighting partners shared in the shedding of blood, as each in turn took his medicine. For quick work Munrce had Andy Gallagher, Fred Landers and Frank Rafael. They tried to outfeint the miner, but were unsuccessful. Munroe's work was done without a rest, as he went from one boxer to another without & respite. After a thorough rubdown he went for a dip in the ocean.. He enjoys this the best of all his round of training Kern River . Lion M point of suffocation when he com- | | menced hfs work and the spectators 300 saw something akin to genuine fight- B ing. The sevéral aspiring neavyweights | 253 uperior Thirty-three Toltec + Twenty-elght . Associated Bon RAN 7 pncl Sk Kern Oil (new Miscellaneous Chutes Company . Cypress Lawn Im Fischer's Theater Northern Cal Pow! Co. &,\L Morning 100 Sterling,'b 90 . Mining Stocks. SAN FRANCISCO STOCK EXCHANGE. Following were the sales on the San Fri cisco Stock and Exchange Board yesterda Morning Session. 75| 300 Mexican . 00 500 Caledonia 790 Con C & Va. and plays about in the surf like a seal. | 100 Exchequer [ Ed i.'z & o N 0 G O\ 00 S Trainer fn Chief Tim McGrath is a| £0 GOl Nor. &si 100 Sifver Hill .. 46 bellever In plenty of work for a boxer | 100 Hale & Norc. 63 and will keep Munroe busy until the day before the fight. Munroe is such | a willing subject that it is easy to keep him at the required notch. Frank McConnell, who was a clever welterweight, will box with Munroe to- PACIFIC STOCK EXCHANGE. Following were the sales on the Pacific Stock Exchange yesterday: Morning Session. 300 Mexican 100 Ophir 200 Ophir 1 700 Ophir 200 400 morrow. A large crowd is expected at | 355 100 Ophir E his quarters to-day. 2000 J 100 Overman . 30 e . 00 3 100 Beg Belcher .. 11 —ee————— Cost of Street Sweeping. Supervisor Braunhart Is preparing to draw the deadly parallel on the Board of Works in its claim that the appropriation of $215,000 ig insuf- 1000 Brunswick 15| 300 Mont Ton .. ficient for the city to do its own street | 1000 Esperanza ... 0;’ % !lgg:t ;l_'on el s § b X 2] 2 i Ton cleaning during the next fiscal year. | 7000 Esperanzs 100 Mont | Ton 13 Braunhart resurrected a report made | 3500 Littie Ton '83 ;(nmn’l‘?n . 275 rea v Namara K ‘'on Belmon! last year, In which the board figured | 1000 MacRam2T2 - %5/ 100 Ton Gola M. 14 that the sum of §207,480 is sufficient | &7 MacNamara | 301000 Ton Midway.. 40 v Namara . 51| 100 Ton Midwe 4 to sweep the streets. In the face of | 2200 MacNamara . £ 00 700 NIgROY- £} that report Braunhart says the board demands $315,000, or more than $100,000 in-excess of its estimate made 100 Sierra Nev 200 100 Yellow Jacket. 100 Mexican TONOPAH MINING EXCHANGE. Following were the sales on the San Fran- cisco and Tonopah Mining Exchange yesterday: Morning Session. CLOSING QUOTATIONS. SATURDAY. June 11—12 m. IS; » E :12, . 1904. ! ADVERTISEMENTS. { 20622000006220600000002000000800000002900000. ; | i ness of men, varicocele, etc. It is free, it develops and expands al natural drains. v ¢ tric Suspensory. It never fails to cure. It is free with Belts for No man should be weak; no man should suffer the loss of that vital element which renders life worth living. No man should allow himself to be- come less a man than nature intended him; no man should suffer for the sins of his youth, when there is here at hand a certain cure for his weakness, a check to his waste of power. Most of the pains,.most of the stomach, heart, brain and nerves, DR. Belt and will the: begin with that I ach is much better plianee. I shall be triends. weakness of from . wh hich back, and you may be ‘as happy as any man that lives. My Electric Belt, with Special Electric Suspen- sory (free) will restore your power. It will check all unnatural drains and give back the old vigor™ aith in of youth. GEORGETOWN, Wash. DR. McLAUGHL Dear Sir—1I fe that T am in duty bound to you and suftering humanity to make & statement in regard to what your Beit has done for me. W hen I purchased your Beit I was in a bad con- dition; was compelled to take medicine every day to move the bowels, and my kidneys and liver were so bad that the least far would give me great pain. May back was so lame that when 1 sat down it was almost impossible for me to.get up again. «If T had not purchased your Belt when I did I believe that I would not have iivea much longer. After uaing the Belt for a short time I found the resuits beyond expectations. All of the above symptoms disappeared. 1 consider your Beit the best in the market to-day and highly commend the attention given each pa- tient while under your care. Yours truly, g JOHN B. WARD. This | ailment. hers says it I've cured tho Every man wl every organ of the body. Most of the ailments from which men suffer can be traced to it. I have cured thousands of men who have squan- dered the savings of years in useless doctoring. My Bt is easy to use; put it on when you go to bed; you feel the glowing heat from it (no sting or burn, as in old-style belts), and you feel the nerves tingle with the new life flowing into Every man w! and counsel of that any medical he. can't. fully illustrated Belt is applied, them. You get up in the morning feéling like a MAN. - Inclose this ad. and I will send this book, | two-year-old. sealed, iree. Btz bove Elli: N !s. DR. M. C. McLAUGHLIN, "%aataier™ iy ., 000009000906 02006000000 0052 00000600000000)00000000023029030000 ——————————————————————— e e - Lost Manhood Varicocele, Impotency and Waste of Manly Power Are Quickly and Forever Cured by the Gran: Preduct of Nature, Dr. McLaughlin's Electric Belt. Send lor th2 Frae Book. Free Electric Susenr for Weak Men This Electric Suspensory carries the current direct to the weak parts and cures all weak- No case of Failing Vigor, Varicocele or Debility can resist the powerful Elec- MeLAUGHLIN Dear Sir—It 1s about thirty days since I recetved your An old man of 70 says he feels as strong and young as he did at 35. That shows how it renews the vigor of youth. It cures Rheumatism, Sciatic Pains, Lumbago, men suffer, are due to an early loss of nature’s 1 reserve power through mistakes of youth. You' Kidney Trouble. need not suffer for this. You can be restored. The never to return. very element which you have lost you can get DR, McLAUGHLIN: Dear Sir—I commenced using your Balt the first of last De- cember. and have received the greatest bemefit from The resuits are wondertul, for it reduced my weight from 250 pounds to 208 pounds. condition of my abdomen was cured. in good order, slcep good t 0 my case ha®® proven its ability. When I suffered for forty-ome years with dropsy. stomach trouble, vital weakness and rheumatism. ache in any of mv bones, not a stiff joint, a pain or any other I am doing politics for you every chance I get, and cne of the gentlemen whom I induced to purchase a_Belt of you What ails you? Write and tell me, and, no mat- ter where you are, I think I can give you the ad- dress of some one in your town that [ have cured. a walking advertisement for my whom I have cured are the more grateful because drain upon your power causes Kidney cause it is honest. Troubles, Rheumatism and Stomach Ailments. You know it's a loss of vital power and affects the cure cost s Try my Belt. Write me to-day for my beauti- who want to be “The Noblest Work of God"—A 37 1l weak organs and checks un- Weak Men. A WATSONVILLE, Cal as you ed. 1 can say to materially in strength, my stom- and 1 am thoroughly satisfied with the ap- #lad to recommend the treatmenmt to my Yours truly, CHRIS. EIFERTSEN. It banishes pain in a night, CAPITOLA, Cal its use. The losses ceased, and the dropsical I eat well, my stomach is . and my eirculation s good. I have your electrical treatment, for the results ame Now I have not an him of Bright's disease of fhe kidneys. Yours very truly, JOHN W. LUNBECK. usands and every man of them is Belt ho ever used it recommends it, be- It does great work, and those o little. ho uses my Belt gets the advice a physician free. I give you all 1 man can give you, and a lot that book with cuts showing how my and lots of good reading for men i i i : § : ; § { Baby Marriages in India. A Bengal contemporary seems to have | unearthed some curious figures buried worthy to be his son, but was willing | to go right’ out into de cotton field | wid de oder field hands and pick cot- | ! deep’ underneath the tomes of the lat- | ton. | est census report. According to this| **‘Is dese yere Southern white folks there are 535 widows in Bengal under |sorry? No, suh; not a bit. Dey don’t one year—that is, so many infants of | supplicate for anything. Dey just from one month to eleven months had ' strop a six-shooter ‘roun’ ‘emselves, | been married in the province and found Stalks in and -says, ‘Whar is dat | widowed. It would be interesting to veal?' "—Washington Post. ———————————— News a La Russe. A Moscow dispatch in the London | Daily News says the extraordinary ig- | norance and credulity of Russla’s peas- | | know the respective ages of the hus- | bands of these hapless little creatures. | Not a few of the husbands might be | found old enough to be their great- | grandfathers, with perhaps several | wives to each. Were all of them Kulin | ants concerning the state of things at, | marriages? | the front is illustrated by a report in | Under two yvears we find the number | the Siberian newspapers of a recent | | of widows in Bengal to be 574; under trial. | | three vears, 651;: under four years,; A notary's clerk named Kolnikoff was | 1576; under five vears, 3361. Here we| arrested at Krasnoyarsk, charged with have something like a holocaust, a sort ' obtaining money by false pretenses. It | | of burning alive of these little mites was alleged that he had opened an In- of humanity, who, but for the preval- formation “kontora” in the xillages and | 'ence of a rigid sex monopoly, would K Cossack settlements, for the purpose of ; probably live to be true wives and truly supplying the families of Siberian re- | happy mothers—the mothers of future servists with “facts” as to the latest | heroes and patriots. What possibilities doings of their Kinsmen. are lost to the race forever under a, According to the evidence he charged system which has not one word to sayf his clients 25 kopecks for information 0 whether the soldiers were alive or dead, for itself! i It is much to be wished that young, and 50 kopecks for transmitting mess- | ages to them by magic. w enriua]k‘.J:;ne:uct;xang;ar::g:slfi fi:zfi:}‘ In order to increase his. clientele he ible. Surely a hundred years of periodically circulated reports of nn& liberal education ought to suffice. for | Suinary battles which he stated hfld this most elementary ‘item of national | taken place around Port Arthur, b:n | improvement. Our remarks apply with declared that local battalions had been | much the same force to other parts of engaged, though these 'batmllons we;e flndla. 1t is idle to talk of the “spirit- often not within a week's journey of the Bn el iR merr}age_ im:ogy:‘::a:_;' (L;xlx‘)::::\l;sis refused to give | being a sacrament, and of baby wives| * g gy i e and baby widows growing to be the evidence A:g.uqst him, dec! - o Lok o guardian angels of society, when, as a had an “Angliskoe stel:lo. or nguy rule, they are consigned to a life of crr%t?l‘ sfi!njlar to !"r“t’rh:“:r;:(e:ly s perpetual penance and self-mortifica- | PY King ;dward; R e he tion, while needing the tenderest care, Produced in cour:» e e e relatives, whom the “‘spirit- 4 % i aonseption of mariisse. does. neot| Vhich tiad wétss oeistRn' «ceHatEly and prevent from marrying again and & crucmx.' Kolniko! v\n: ! ag'nln. | six weeks' imprisonment. Terrible, according to our Shastras, | Clenning of M A SR | The eléaning of Havana and - San- D R tiago has practically«left Mexico the the curse remains unuttered. Who can “Ufsl fever district. That country is tell how much.of INAis's mMIsery. Axisen . oo pree “Sriine (hedtusdue,” thiqugh from the unuttered sufferings of her | the indications are. that, as a result o Grushifml T T ! the severe cpidemic of last year, a dl!;‘ ' | ferent story may soon be told. Wit ek i | Mexico out of the way—for-it may be They were lounging in Senator FOr- | oxpected that the Mexican Government afirgéuiotia:thom the other dist. l\;:lll carry out the promises it recently Speaker Cannon and a.dozen Senators | mage to representatives of the United and Representatives, and this Was | geates marine hospital service to de- Senator Carmack’s story, when it got| oy the plague spots and enforce san- { | | 1 A “Holy” Railroad. How many persons know that there is right here in North America a “holy railroad”? This is a little line twenty- one miles long, from Quebec to Ste. Anne de Beaupre. It is sacred because it claims to run “especially for the ac- commodation of pilgrims”, and above all, because at its opening a few years since it was formally blessed, with all its belongings, by Cardinal Taschereau. Every Sunday the trains are crowded by devotees in search of the blessing of the good Saint Anne, who Is credited’ with the miraculous power of healing, and on July 26, Saint Anne's day, the road cannot accommodate the enor- mous crowds which flock to her shrine. Think of riding on a holy ratlroad! But those who have traveled on it know that they must not expect the comforts of Paradise. It may be called “holy”, but it seems td be runm, none the less, with an eye to dividends. The charges are high and the service poor. —N. Y. Commercial. —_——— Japanese Novelties. The literature of Japan has excited some jealousy in Paris. Nowhere, says a sprightly critic, is fiction so much written and read as in the land of the Mikado. Japanese romances are enormously long and dull. One of them, entitled “The Story of FEight Dogs,” runs to 116 volumes, and at the end of all the characters, numbering fifty, without counting the dogs, are dead, and the reader’s condition is not much better. Happily, adds the critic, this tale has not yet been’ translated into Russian. Evidently he is a feuil- letonist, who wishes he could keep a story going as long and heap up as many corpses. But in justice to Japan it should be said that the romance in question is in 106 voiumes only, a that the dogs are Japanese gentlemen, whose canine character is allegorical. —London Daily Chronicle. —_——————— A lttle cheer is worth a lot of eriti- cism. —— ADVERTISEMENTS. VIGOR AND HEALTH up to him: “Just after the war, in reconstruc- tion days, the Democrats down my way hired a negro to do some cam- | pzaigning among his own race. This negro dwelt with great fervor upon the {itary regulations—th Central and | South American countries are left to | deal with. Some of the latter have said within a year that they would clean their ports, but such statements cannot | be ‘relied - upon. ley recently gave Congressman Clark! a picture of himself in which he ap- pears lllustrating the classic song “And the Wind Blew Through His Whisk- ers.” When Tapley wants to exhibit his hirsute, appendage in all its glory he takes it from his vest, where he commonly keeps it, attaches the loose J =nd of it to the hinge of a door and then backs off untjl it becomes taut.—- Kansas City Journal. By Frank H. Spearman. Those who love the thrill of mystery and the clash and United States. The crop adorns the fer- | tral, .41 cents. roar of dangerous adven- turing will read this tile chin of Vol Tapley, a farmer, and i B new story in the is more than eleven feet in length. Tap NEXT SUNDAY CALL. last year. The estimate was made on BId.A!}t-IJ e e, 95 - Vi 1. 0| Justice 2 Jiaali 60 33 80"a day S0tk wiges| At B e, 8 b, Andes 12 13| Keyes Gr: —120 Big Show of Multicolored Rats. | Bett & A28 % 35| Ocoldentai. .. - 70 61 A ‘successful rat show was recently | Caledonia 72 73|0phir ... 435 4 40 held at Cheltenham, England. There | Challeose Con 1§ JRIGReERan oo 49 30 were sixty exhibits of black, gold, | coohience 95 1 05/Scorplon ..... 17 18 gray, white, piebald and tan rats,| Con C 130 IS Bech w» 1o Some agricultural journals, comment- | €08 MR 08 R R 17 | ver .. a7 ing on it, maintain that the rat has' gfl""“:’r‘r"- % % Tist Louls .... 9 10 an economic future and may become | gyreka Con.. — S0|Syndicate ... 03 04 a table dainty in England, as it is in | Exchequer .. 43 ;fl'fi:‘.",’." Con .. i fi China. To many people the show s | Gould & Cur- 3 2y liow Jacket 25 28 the first correction of the impression 0 10/ that rats are all alike, whereas the varities of them, all more or less alike Colehan .. B‘_G.'A‘:'i‘fiw & O'Brien B‘o%“ll)‘i in characteristics, are quite numerous. | Esperanza 0z u The first display having been a marked | G0l Anchor- — 8 success, -others will no doubt follow, 25 25 and the rodent be studied with in- 1 L creasing attention, the prodpect, how- — 03| Ton 13 eyer, of finding out anything good | MacXamara - B i about him being not at all promising. | Mont Ton2 w"o: M%I;o- e ‘on % —New York Tribune. P er 18] Totted o =% ® ——— The Russian’s saints’ day and im- .| perial fete dates are so numerous that he works not more than twenty-one days in a month. WASHINGTON, June 11.—The joint and navy board has postponed until next fall the consideration. of the question_of control of wireless telegraph systems operating on the ecasts of the United States. us scandalous way the north was treat- ’ 1t is for this reason that the sanitary ing the returning Southerners. { work which the United States will be *‘Why,’ sald the negro orator, ‘de | gpliged to do along the canal strip will ’vrodlxfll son was treated better than | have more beneficial results than sim- | dese white folks is beirig.treated. -You | piy making the district a healthy place all remembers about dat prodigal son. | ¢y jjve.in... The influence of that work When he come back his father met | will - be it in . Central and South him while he was yet afar off, and put ; Americaand it" will unquestionably a.ring on his finger and a new robe { spur the negligent governments to do on him, and kiiled de fatted calf—yes, | their share in. preventing epidemics. suh, de fatted calf.’ This phase of the canal question has “Then a Republican negro cam- | atgracted little attention, but it is of | paigner followed. ‘Dat nigger didn’t | far-reaching importance, The building | tell you-all right about dat fatted calf | of such a waterway as the isthmian husjness,’ he said. ‘De straight ob de | canal -will be a great attainment, but ! story was another way. You must re- | of hardly less value fo mankind will be member dat de prodigal son was sorry | the cleansing of the foul cities to the | for his misdoings. He come back and | north and south of the isthmus.—Buf- 'lowed to his father dat he was not alo Express | known sclentific means which Will positiveiy enlarge and fully develop them. Used with our Loecal Absorbing Stimulating Tonle, Germicidal, [— e s e 1 Medicated Urethral Crayoas always Guckly” cares whers all eise fails. ~Gloet, ail Drains, Losses. Varicocele, Stricture, Frema- tureness, Eniargement of Prostate Gl ete. A-sate. wmple home cure NEVER FAILS m/ one of eur Sy give action and produce results in 5 Minutes. Sbpited locally only. Works like magic. Don't fall to call on us for demonstration or writs for new illustrated bock, No. . sent free. Hours, 9 w0 9; Sundays 10 to L. HEALTH APPLIANCE CO., 6 0’Farrell St.

Other pages from this issue: