The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, August 6, 1904, Page 3

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, SATURDAY, AUGUST 6, 1904. BALFOUR ENRAGES THE OPPOSITION BY APPLICATION OF CLOSURE RULE| WEST IN STYLE With Cries of “Shame!” the Minority Members of the House of Commons, Led by Asquith, Gladstone and Dilke, Walk Out of Chamber in a Body as a Protest Against the Premier's Course in Shutting Off Debate|, ..., | | PRIZE CONTEST S A LOTTERT Judge Decides Publisher Who Advertised the Com- petition Violated the Law The Court of Ap- that Ismars El- United States ated the anti- al code of New ALBANY, he compe tion amount of ax paid on certain brands of Zes, The court in ses the Appellate Di- hich af- he special term r from custody. urt of Appeals is slen. who, after f the advertise- ished by the ne the of the Fioro- slishing the r prizes detailed was to increase = brands of cigars. was justified in legal means to en the Legis- the guise of tion, interfere the prohibition gambling in all E v of every description bly wvalid exercises of power, and if the scheme establishe y the advertiser was in effect a the fact that the dom- -inant =e was merely to increase the advertiser's business does not save it from condemnation His conclusion is that the contest was 2 lottery —_—————— SLAY CHINESE WHEN A FAVOR Marysville Interpreter Is Killed by His Countrymen on a Street of Sacramento. SACRAMENTO, Aug. 5—Len Loy, a Chinese interpreter, who came here from N lle, was stabbed about 1 G'clock morning by one of three Chinese who stopped him on the street in Chinatown. They wanted him to do them some favor, which he declined to do, when one of them drew a dirk knife &and stal him twice, once in the ab- | domen and once in the back. He died at 7 o'clock this morning. ————— STABS HIMSELF WHEN THE JAIL DOORS OPEN Laborer Ends His Life When He Is Sentenced for Disturbing the Peace. N PEDRO, Aug. 5.—Shortly after seing locked up in the City Jail to serve a sentence of ten days for dis- turbing the peace James Cowan, a la- _ borer on the Government breakwater construction here, drew a knife from his pocket and plunged it into his . -breast, dving half an hour later. Cowan had been drinking and was despondent. —_—— Henry Critchell Dies Suddenly. Henry Critchell, 78 years of age, died suddenly at 4:45 this morning at . his residence, 1309 Hayes street. . Heart disease was the cause of death. . “BILLY'S TENDERFOOT.” A clever short story by STEWART EDWARD WHITE, in THE CALL NEXT SUNDAY. — s | LONDON, Aug. 5.—There was an ex- traordinary scene in the House of Com- mons to-day during the discussion in | frustrate the devices of the Welsh | County Councils, which are endeavor- | ing to refuse to carry out the education | act. | Premier Balfour moved the closure, “* i | - | | | 1 | ‘ | | | 1 | | | | | | | | ! | ; | | | | | | t : e —_ - + 1 WHO WALKED MIER BALFOI | ) + n - - AGENT'S NOTE IROLSES FEAR "Western Mining Man Hints at Suicide in Letter Writ- ten to Hotel Proprietor —_— Special Dispat INDIANAPOL! h to The Call. , Aug. 5—The fol- lowing note has been received at a hotel where H. D. Brunson, an agent for a Western mining enterprise, has been a guest for several weeks: | “Please send my bill to Butterfield, Los Angeles, Cal, No. 306-307 Bryson [ block. When directed please dispose of my belongings as they request. When this reaches you I shall be gone forever. Life for me too hard to bear. Sincerely, “H. D. BRUNSON.” The receipt of the note caused alarm on account of the man's absence and his effects were examined and a box of cartridges with one cartridge miss- ing was found. Brunson is said to have had a revolver. The manager of hotel says Brunson was worried telegrams sent to Mexico City LOS ANGELES, Aug. 5.“H. D. Brunson, who is missing from the Hotel Spencer at Indianapolis, under circumstances that indicate that he had committed suicide, formerly re- sided at Hollywood, a suburb of Los Angeles. Several acquaintances of Brunson stated to-night that he was formerly employed as a clerk by the Hollywood Lumber Company, but that he resigned during the winter and went to Mexico, where he organized and attempted to float a lumber com- pany. He had married a daughter of Mrs. Catherine Butterfield and they resided in Hollywood until recently, when he went East and Mrs. Butter- field came to Los Angeles with her | daughter to live. Brunson is said to have lost every- thing he possessed in the Mexican iluml\er d and though it was known | that he was despondent it is not be- |lieved that he has taken his life. —_—— BRAKEMAN ON SIERRA i RAILWAY IS KILLED | | Man’s Head Strikes Iron Pipe Which Crosses Track and His Neck Is Broken. SONORA, Aug. 5.—John Fehrman, a brakeman on the Sierra Railroad, was killed near the depot in this city to- | day. He was standing upon a box car as the train was passing rapidly through an open cut, across which a pipe line extended. Fehrman's head was brought in contact with the iron pipe and his neck was broken. Fehr- man was a German, 30 years of age. —_——— A self-made man seldom mixes mod- esty with the material used in his con- struction. | i i i { but on division the opposition members, ing a storm of up rious protest, refused to record their votes and the chairman of the committee named a number of membe to the Speaker. After a heated discussion, amid re- newed uproar and cries of “Shame!"| almost the entire opposition, led by th and Herbert Gladstone and Sir Diike, left the house as a pro- nst the closure. | The bill was then passed in the pres- | | ence of full ministerial benches, six ! members of the opposition and a few Irish memb. 1o — LIVES THOUGH BULLET | PASSED THROUGH BRAIN | Would-Be Suicide Who Lost Part of « Matter Ready for Dis- charge From Hospital. NEWARK, N. J., ~—Almost | recovered from a bullet wound | |through the brain, Frederick Beck, | | who tried to kill himself on July 11 will be discharged from the City Ho: pital in a few days. tered the right temple, and, passing | through the brain, was found just un- der the skin an inch and a half below | the left temple. When the bullet was taken out part of the brain fol- | lowed fit. | Almost as remarkable as Beck's re- Aug. The bullet en- IS DENIED because of failure to receive replies to | covery is the fact that nome of his |senses nor intellectual capacity has | been affected in the slightest degree. | He is as sound as ever, except for a little weakness. —— s TORRENTS CAU DAMAGE IN AN ARIZONA TOWN Rushing Waters Sweep Away Much Property, but No Lives Are Lost. PHOENIX, Ariz, Aug. 5.—A special from Douglass says that Bisbee was this afternoon visited by the biggest flood in its history. So far as known there was no loss of life, though many were caught in the torrents that rushed down the Tombstone Canyon., Horses, wagons, mules and small buildings were washed down stream. A subway tunnel designed to carry away the flood waters in the Tombstone Canyon was recently completed and it served its purpose well, for without it the flood in the streets above would have caused great loss of life, —_——— MISSIONARY COMPLETES A REMARKABLE JOURNEY Heaches Fair After Traveling 26,000 Miles With Eight Strange Companions. ST. LOUIS, Aug. 5.—One of the most remarkable trips in connection with the exploitation of the World's Fair was comnpleted to-day when the Rev. 8, P. Verner, the Presbyterian missionary, who brought eight pigmies out of the African jungles, arrived in St. Louis. His journey included 26,000 miles, 800 of which was traversed on foot through the wilds ahd deserts of Central Africa. The trip lasted eight aonths, | committee stage of a bill designed to' | Mahan, who was out hunting, st KNIGHTS COME |RUSSIAN FORCES REPEL AN ATTACK B e S Magnificent Special Train . Will Carry Templars to the Triennial Conclave E DISTINGUISHED lDelegation Will Come Over the Northern Route and | . Return by Southern Line: BY THE JAPANESE NEAR Mikado Has Twenty Full Army Divisions Now in Manchuria. — Expects Kuropatkin’s Sur- render and Port Ar- thur's Fall Same Day. PORTLAND, Or., AUg. 5—What is| said to be the finest and largest special | train ever sent on a transcontinental journey will arrive here next Wednes- ay morning en route to" San Fran- ' cisco bearing 287 Knights Templar from Pittsburg on their way to the twenty-ninth Triennial Conclave, which is to be held in the California metrop- | | olis early in September. i The train will consist of six large Pullman sleepers, four compartments in each car, a sixty-foot baggage car and a sixty-eight-foot commiss | built especially for the Knights on their trip. The train will come over the Northern lines and will return by way of Los Angeles and the South. The ! party will include some of the most prominent men of Pennsylvania. Lol RAILWAY W FIGHT AGAIN:S GOVERNMENT | r | Canadian Line Is Given Decision | Suit Involving Right to Use i Mineral Land. | VANCOUVER, B. C., Aug. 5.— ‘(-ial cable announces that the C |and Edmonton Raiiway branch of the Canadian Pacific Comn- pany, has won its abveal before the | Privy Council in the suit with the crown over the right to sell all miner- | als except gold and silver in the grant | of lands to the company by the Do- minion Government in May, 1900. The contention of the Government was that | nothing had been said of minerals, and they therefore come under the general | regulations and were reserved to the |crown. This view was taken by the! Supreme Court of Canada, hut was up- set by the Privy Council decision to- | day. | i ———— | pocTORS WILL ATTEND ! | INTERNATIONAL CONGR | ESS Governor Pardee Appoints Physicians to Go to Tuberculosis Conven- tion at St. Louis. SACRAMENTO, Aug. Governor | Pardee this afternoon announced the ! appointment of the following doctors to attend the International Corgr Tuberculos which will be held within the exposition grounds at St. Louis on October 3: Dr. N. K. Foster, Dr. W. A. . Briggs and Dr. Edward Twitchell of Sacramento; Dr. Henry Gibbons Jr., { Dr. Philip Ki Brown, Dr. ¢. N. Ellin- {wood, Dr. William Watt Kerr, Dr. A. A. d’Ancona and Dr. D. A. Hodghead of San Francisco; Dr. F. M. Pottenger | and Dr. H. Bert Ellis of Los Angeles, Dr. C. Browning of Highlands, Dr. Cornelius Van Zwalenberg of River- side, Dr. Fred R. Burnham of San Diego, Dr. Chester H. Rowell of Fres- no, Dr. C. W. Nutting of Etna and Dr. | Frank L. Adams of Oakland. | — e | FARMER OF TULARE KILLED ACCIDEY NTALLY ing Fence With Gun in Hand . Mahan Is Fatally Shot. TULARE, Aug. 5—T. B. Mahan, a well-to-do farmer residing about four miles east of Tulare, accidentally shot and killed himself about noon to-day. rted to climb over a fence. He slivped, and the shotgun which he v carrying was discharged, the full load entering s left arm at the elbow. i It wus some time afterward that he | was fourd, and the loss of so much | blood and the shock so weakened him that he died at about 3 o’clock this aft- ernoon. He leaves a wife and two chil- | dren, one a daughter who resides in Los Angeles. The body will be shipped East Sunday. | e | | TRAINS WILL JON BE | MOVING IN ARIZONA | 1 Temporary Repairs Are About Com- | plete and Weather Outlook Is Bright. LOS ANGELES, Aug, 5.—Advices re- | ceived at the local Santa Fe headquar- ters from General Superintendent Shep- | herd of the western division, who is| in charge of the repair work of the| company’s roadbed destroyed by recent | floods in Arizona, states that the tem- porary work will be sufficiently con- | cluded by to-night to allow the passage of trains. In the meantime traffic both | east and west is practically suspended, the westbound trains being held at Kingman and the eastbound at San Bernardino. It is expected that trains| will be delaved about twelve hours. e Sergeant Shoots Himself., MONTEREY, Aug. 5.—Sergeant Sim- mons of Company E, Fifteenth Infan- try, killed himself in his quarters at Ord Barracks early this morning by using his rifle. Domestic troubles are said to have been the cause. —_——— BESIEGERS ARE LEGION, Japan Has One Hundred Thousand Men Before Port Arthur. TIENTSIN, Aug. 5.—F-avy and continuous firing was heard yesterday at Peitasho from the direction of Port Arthur. There are persistent rumors here from Japanese sources that the fall of Port Arthur will occur within a week, but military experts are of the opinion that a month will elapse be- fore the Japanese make their final assault. It is estimated that there are 100,000 Jupanese troops before Port Arthur. BERLIN, Aug. 5—The National Zeitung prints a private telegram from Tokio, dated August 5, in which it is said that there are five Japanese divi- sions before Port Arthur, part of them within three and a half miles of the fortress, and that there are altogether twenty divisions in Manchuria. The telegram says that Tokio is ex- pecting the fall of Port Arthur and the capitulation of General Kuropatkin on the same day. ST. PETERSBURG, Aug. 6.—A Rus- sian correspondent of the Associated Press, describing the general Japanese advance of last Sunday east of Liao- yang, says that one of the Japanese columns, taking advantage of the com- plicated network of mountain paths and deep gorges, actually crept around r of the Russian position before covered. He explains this by saying that the topography of the country is so com- plicated and seamed with ravines that two hostile armies might be within the space of a half-mile without suspeciing each other’s presence. In describing the fighting around Simoucheng the correspondent paints a picture of soldiers fighting all day long in the stifling dust and the torrid heat. From an eminence on which he stood thie correspondent could see down to the westward plantations of waving kaolin, the crown of which was so high that squadrons of Japanese cavalry | wended their way within a quarter of a mile of the Russian cavalry, neither side suspecting the proximity of the othe ‘The correspondent could detect the| movemerts of the enemy thiough the field by ihe small clouds of dust which | 4 when the crisis came, as Japanese batteries enflladed the)| Russian gunners. Then the oirder was given to retire, and Major General Mistchenko's cavalry, a brigade of ar- tillery and the Barnaol regiment cov- ered the retreat. were the The Japanese swarmed into the Bar- naols’ trenches, coming so close that | the Russians actual wrenched the | guns from their hands, clubbing the; Japanese with their own rifles. Some of the infantry had to cut their| way out at enormous sacrifice. One | company lost all its officers and most | of its men. | In addition to the terrific heat of the | day and of the battle the correspond- ent says that the Russian soldiers suf- fered dreadfully ~because they were obliged to carry their heavy overcoats | and equipments. The number of sunstrokes was great. To add still further to the misery of | the men, the water in their canteens | soon became exhausted and the springs were nearly all dried up by the torrid | heat. Surgeon Kerenitvich said it was actually so hot that some of his fmen ! burned their hands on the brass but- tons and buckles of the soldiers as they undressed the wounded. Only | when night fell did the troops get any relief. The wounded were loaded into Red Cross cars which had been | especially arranged for this purpose at Haicheng. The correspondent mentions that the | One Hundred and Thirty-seventh Regi- ment, belonging to the Thirty-first Di- vision of the Seventeenth Army Corps, | was engaged in this fight. This is the first definite information that any of the troops of the Seventeenth Army Corps were on the firing line. INSURANCE MAY NOT BE PAID. Policies Written on Arabia’s Cargo After the Ship Was Seized. PORTLAND, Or., Aug. 5.—That| some of the insurance written on parts ! of the cargo of the China liner Arabia | may not be paid without a fight on the part of the companies issuing poli- cies, or will not be paid at all, seems probable as a result of developments to-day. It is learned that policies were written on freight the day fol- lowing the capture of the steamship. ‘This is no reflection upon the shippers, but may afford grounds for a refusal to pay the policies. The Arabia was seized on Friday, July 22, and late on that day cable { inch guns on b advices were received in this city re- porting rumors that the Russian Vladivostok squadron had captured the vessel. On the strength of these rumors certain portions of her cargo which had not been insured at the time of her departure from this port were covered by war risks. The vessel having actually been seized at the time the war risks were taken out, the in- surance companies do not feel obligated to pay the risks and will fight the case in the courts. —— CURBING KOREAN DISCONTENT. Japan Increases Her Garrison in Her- mit Kingdom Capital. Special Cable to The Call and New York Herald. Copyright, 1904, by the New York Herald Publishing 'Company. SEOUL, Wednesday, via Chefu, Aug. 5.—Reinforcements for the local Japanese garrison have arrived daily for the past week until a total of 5000 men has been reached. They have twelve field guns. The Japanese still maintain semi-martial law throughout Seoul, fearing that beneath a peaceful exterior the natives still harbor the anti-Japanese feeling which the Japan- ese demands on the Korean Govern- ment greatly aroused. It is reliably stated that Japanese Minister Hayashi has received in- structions from Tokio to accomplish these important measure: First, a reduction of the Korean standing - : JEROMI K. JEROME. “Waiters I Have Known.” See this interesting article in THE SUNDAY CALL. e & army; second, reorganization of the monetary system on an equality with the Japanese; third, to obtain control of Korea's foreign relations. —————————— Legislation cannot take the place of love. —_ WAR BULLETINS MUKDEN, Aug. 5.—It is reported that the Japanese attacked the Rus- slan position at Anshanshan, midway between Haicheng and Liaoyang, on August 2 and were repulsed with heavy losses. The Russian casualties are not known. LONDON, Aug. 6.—The Daily Illus- trated Mirror says that two Russian cruisers have just left the Baltic Sea and are chasing a steamship which left England on July 30 for Canada, carrying ammunition for Yokohama, by way of the Canadian Pacific Rail- way. CHEFU, Aug. 5.—Thirty more refu- | gees arrived to-day on junks tmn' Port Arthur, which place they left on August 1. The departure of all civil- | ians from Port Arthur is said to be owing to the exhaustive preparations | for a final stand against the Japanese. | - . Russian Admirals Are Ordered Not to Sink Prize Ships. AT - Y T ST. PETERSBURG, Aug. 6. — There will be no repetition of the Knight Commander and Thea incidents. Russia has issued instructions to naval com- manders not to sink neutral merchant- men with contraband on board in the future, except in cases of dire neces- sity, but In cases of emergency to haul prizes into neutral ports. Her “dire necessity” may be regarded as a reservation of a right which Russia does not formally relinquish, but which it is safe to say will not again be ex- | ercised during the present war. Much interest is manifested in Gov- ernment and diplomatic circles regard- ing the dispatches from the United States, which report that the Wash- ington Government is sounding the | powers as to their position concerning neutral commerce. This action of the | United States Government is inter- | preted as an indisposition to act hastily | and as indicating no desire to precipi- tate an unnecessary issue with Russia. The attitude of the United States Gov- ernment is gratifying to the Russian authorities, FEREA ST ) GUNS FOR PORT ARTHUR. | Newchwang’s Artillery Reinforces the | Cannon of the Garrison. CHEFU, Aug. 5.—Exhaustive inter- views with refugees from Port Arthur who arrived here to-day elicited noth- | ing materially changing previous | stories of the general situation. While | the guns of the fortress were em- | ployed during the three days’ fighting | the fortress itself was not attacked di- | rectly. On July 31 a steamship entered | Port Arthur from Newchwang carry- | ing artillery as well as 65,000 shells | of various sizes, The refugees say that the 12-inch shell which hit the Japanese gun on Wolf's Mountain was not fired from | the battleship Retvizan, but from a gun mounted on Peripiolkaga Hill. The shell struck a magazine and created havoc. The refugees declare that the 12- ard the warships have no difficulty in reaching Wolf's Moun- | tain, while the Japanese return fire falls short of the cit SR TG RETREAT FROM HAICHENG. Russian Eetirement Due to the Jap- anese Flanking Movement. NG, Tuesday, Aug. 2.—The e been obliged to retire | from here, as the Japanese were work- ing around them from the -east, threatening to cut them off from Liao- vang. The fresh Japanese troops dis- embarked at the port of Newchwang are also advancing on the other flank. The main concentration of the Rus- sians is now about Liaoyang. The Japanese form a semi-circle of about fifty miles around the Russian posi- tions. — . — SHIPS TO LEAVE BLACK SEA. Volunteer Vessels Will Not Be Trans- formed Into War Craft. CONSTANTINOPLE, Aug. 5.—It is announced here that Russia has noti- fied the Porte of the impending pass- age through the Dardanelles of some volunteer fleet steamships laden with coal. Russia, it is said, has given assurance that the vessels will pre- serve the character of merchantmen throughout the voyage. R S WOUNDED MEN CROWD TRAINS. Two Red Cross Hospitals Have Been Opened at Irkutsk. IRKUTSK, Siberia, Aug. 5.—Trains filled with wounded men are arriv- ing daily from the front, many of them proceeding to European Rus- sia and others remaining here. Two Red Cross hospitals have been opened here and one private hospital has been established by the wife of Governor Mollerius. The prices of food have doubled recently. RS S Says Russians Offered a Bribe. LONDON, Aug. 5.—The Times asserts that the captain of the Peninsular and Oriental steamship Malacca, captured by the volunteer fleet steamer St. Petersburg in the Red Sea and subse- quently released at Algiers, was offered, a bribe of 310,000 to admit that he had LIAOYANG Port Arthur's Capture to Be Signal for Rising in Finland. —— Plan for Revolt Perfected at Congress of Revo- lutionists. RIS M Special Dispatch to The Calk PARIS, Aug. 5. — Zillacus, the well- known Finnish exile and revolutionist, who is now in this city, corroborates the report that a secret revolutionary congress took place at Evian-Les-Bains just before the assassination of Von Plehwe. He denies, however, that the assassin belonged to the organization which met there. Zillacus says that the majority who were present were Russians, but there were also a number of Finns. Measures were taken to insure the rapid distribution of revolutionary literature and weapons in Finland and Russia as soon as Port Arthur falls, or some other decisive Russian disaster occurs. This accounts for the presence in Switzerland of numbers of revolu- tionists, whose arrival has puzzled the police. Zillacus laughs at the idea that the police can prevent the consummation of the revolutionary plan when once a Russian catastrophe has opened the eyes of the Finns. ALY S FOUR THOUSAND SLAVS FALL. Official Statement of Losses in the Fighting Near Haicheng. ST. PETERSBURG, Aug. 5.—Detailed reports reaching the War Office from General Kuropatkin's generals show that the Russian losses on July 30. July 31 and August 1 did not exceed 4000. | The Japanese are believed to have lost at least an equal number. The greatest number of casualties was sustained by General Herschel- mann, who with the Ninth European division, held Kuchiatzu and Yushu passes on the Siamatsza road. The fighting there was of the most desper- ate and bloody character. Ome regi- ment lost 25 per cent, or 300 men, be- fore it withdrew toward Anping. Another point where stubborn resist- ance was made was at Nanga Pass, a position between Simoucheng and Hai- | cheng, which was held by General Zas- | sulitch, whe had been placed in co mand of a newly formed corps, includ- | ing the Thirty-first division belonging to the Tenth European Corps and two Siberian battalion: altogether 18, men. General Zassulitch's misfortune at the Yalu River was duplicated, ow- ing to the superiority of the Japanefe artillery. He. was king a splendid fight until he suddenly discovered that s, the Japanese gunners were enfllading his batteri It appears that General Zassulitch in this case was not to blame. The information that General Yaronbiarff had received orders to re- tire had not yet reached him be- fore orders for the withdrawal of the Russian support of the right, and con- sequently he allov the Japanese to take up a new position, suddenly un- mask batteries and overwhelm the Russian gunners, who made desperate effort® to remove their pieces, but were compelled to leave six of them behind. RS S BURYING RUSSIAN DEAD. Japanese Find Seven Hundred Bodies on Simoucheng Battle Ground. TOKIO, Aug. 5.—It is now estimated that the Russians lost 2000 men in the fighting at Simoucheng. The Japanese Sanitary Corps recoversw and buried 700 bodies in the valleys through which the Russians fought and retreated. Prisoners and Chinese report that many of the Russian dead and wounded were removed by the Russians themselves. The Japane: captured six guns, 570 shells, a quan- tity of stores and thirty-three prison- ers. A detachment of the Russian Medical Corps, which was captured by the Jap was returned to the Fussian line The Japanese casual- ties at Simoucheng totaled 860 men, e including eight officers killed - and twenty-four officers woundéli*! » DR. PIERCE'S REMEDIES. S} ing his jaded horse to remewed eficxts when the snimal should be refreshed with proper food and rest, is about as sen- sible as prescribing nerve tomics, alcoholic compounds, coca mixtures and cocktails which only spur on the already weakened nervous system. Neither does it do to put the nerves to sleep with narcotics. When ou feel worn-out, broken down, jaded, and leel the effects of brain tire as well as nerve weakness, sleeplesstiess and fatigue, take Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery, a tonic which will do you lasting g(r;od. bn':‘!;xl you up, increase your appetite and stren; and improve the cnnd?(ion of the blood. When the blood is impoverished the nerves feel the effect. Nervousness in nine cases contrabrand of war on board, and that the Russian officers also declared that any dry and unsweetened biscuits con- stituted contrabrand. R e Japan Landing Fresh Army. ST. PETERSBURG, Aug. 5.—A spe- cial dispatch to the Bourse Gazette from Liaoyang says: “According to Chinese reports the Japanese landed 5000 men at the port of Newchwang on July 31 and the former disem- barkation of troops is proceeding.” ——— G ———— Patience is the perfume of crushed joys. out of ten is the "cry of the starved nerves for food.” Feed the nerves on rich blood and all nervous manifestations will cease. "It has been seven mouths since usi Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, and used thase bottles of the medicine when if h?el like a new man,” writes S. A. Miller, me a care of Mr. Amos H: . R. D. 10), Ot S iad " docured “mith Ewo Jocai cians without benefit. I felt all worn out, had an awful misery in my back for two but noticed, a change for the better when ‘began using your ' Golden Medical Discovery. To gain knowledge of vour own body— in sickness and health—send for the Peo- le's Common Senmse Medical Adviser. A gook of 1008 pages. Send 21 cemts in st for -covered, or, ‘-r 'N:Em.bon’;' c:my Add:-ktl. R 663 Street, Buffalo, N. Fonty t made Main

Other pages from this issue: